More PENISES free - Daehanmindecline

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More PENISES free - Daehanmindecline
free
Issue
Fucking 2
Four
with purchase of
zine of
equal or
greater
value
more
More
pages!
PENISES
THAN EVER BEFORE!
featuring interviews with!
shorty cat!
musiro records!
king lychee!
PLUS!
36 tips to please
your man!
skinhead
collector cards
http://www.brokeinkorea.proboards46.com
you
Broke in Korea
this is
for how
many years?
Issue 2
This zine is published sporadically. Get off my case!
Editor
Jon Twitch
Contributors
Joseph Atskunk
Nevin Domer
Good ol’ 박현
Jiyoung Lee
Jane McKellar
Paul Mutts
Soju Rat
Jungy Rotten
JM Verville
Translation
99Anger Lee
Something Fierce Ian
Gunhee
Things Victor Says
Art
dacXlee (Croatia)
Maurizio (Italy)
Photos
Jon Twitch
(unless otherwise noted)
Layout
Jon Twitch
Front page model
Unknown. He represents the
perfect stereotypical foreigner—the everywaegook, if you
will. I mean, who else would
be just waking up in the park
around 2pm, wearing his sweats
and getting ready to drink two
beers? Because we’ve used his
picture without permission—I’m
going to offer him a deal.
Everywaegook, if you are reading this, please e-mail me for a
special prize. You may win the
authentic shirt worn by Randy
from the hit Canadian TV show
Trailer Park Boys. And two
McDonald’s cheeseburgers. No
set though.
Contact
[email protected]
Message Board
http://brokeinkorea.tk
Broke Online
http://skunklabel.com/
eman.html
Contributors welcome
This zine was designed
using a pirated copy of
Adobe IndDesign CS. What
are you gonna do about it?
Huh? Huh?
Group Sex in Skunk Hell
Sensationalist headline shakes community
Jon Twitch
It looks perfectly normal,
huh? Not if you remember what
was painted there before.
On Thursday, April 21,
Skunk owner Won Jonghee and
volunteers painted over a great
deal of the graffiti outside Skunk
Hell and the front entrance.
They were ordered to do it by
residents of the building where
Skunk Hell is located.
“It was when two foreigners had sex that they asked to
erase [the graffiti],” said Won
Jonghee.
One thing in particular
that bothered tenants was the
spraypainted word “때씹,” or
“group sex.” In conjunction
with the lustful sounds at their
door, they began to postulate.
In Won’s words: “’Is Skunk
a sex club?’ they wondered.
‘Erase it or we’ll sue you.
And do not have sex on the
stairs.’”
The magic night was April
16, at an otherwise ordinary
show. The two participants
had met for the first time that
night, got incredibly drunk, and
during the last band snuck off
together. Little did they know,
they were propped against
the door to someone’s home.
What’s worse, the residents
may have been inside. “That’s
why the owner of the building
got to know it,” suggests Won.
The racket they caused
lured up a few Korean punks,
who ogled the tryst for a few
minutes. According to eyewitness Joseph Atskunk, “There
was a whole crowd of onlookers when they dragged me up
there.”
When Won was alerted, he
told the participants: “I’ll give
you guys five minutes. After
five minutes, I don’t wanna say
this, but come down.”
However, neither fucker
can recall his warning, as a
side-effect of their intoxication. The female participant, a
Canadian English teacher, began vomiting all over the stairs.
“I blacked out for a while,” she
said by e-mail, “so the end of
the night is a bit of a fuzz.”
She offered an apology to
the venue, which Won promptly
refused. “I have swore off soju
for the rest of my life,” she
says. “I would just like to forget the entire night happened.”
The male participant, an
American airman stationed
in Osan, was chased away by
other foreigners. According
to a colleague, he was later
arrested for a separate fight
elsewhere in Hongdae.
“You don’t have to worry
about seeing [the male] anymore
anyway,”
announced
Atskunk. “He was involved in
an ‘alcohol-related incident,’
which is bad news bears for
those of you who know nothing of the military. And if that
wasn’t enough for the poor
guy, he’s underage. I think they
slapped him with 45/45 (an Article 15), which will totally suck
ass in Korea.”
An Article 15 carries a fine
up to 45 days’ pay, extra duty
for up to 45 days, and reduction
in rank. “Basically, [it’s] like
being grounded for big people,”
explains Atskunk.
The lovely new paint job in Skunk.
On top of that, he is banned
from Skunk. When asked if
either foreigner would ve allowed back, Won exclaimed,
“No way.”
The airman told another
Osan punk that he will not return to Skunk, because Korean
punks are all “tight-asses” and
punks should permit chaos, ri-
oting, property damage, and
public sex.
“Having sex with people is
okay,” said Won, “but this is
Korea. If you go to Rome, you
gotta act like a Rome person.
Here you’ve at least got to act
like you’re a visitor.
“I don’t want to say this
is not your country, but this
[Skunk Hell] is not your
room.”
Atskunk left harsher words
on the Broke message board.
“Drink at fucking home if you
can’t keep your pants on. If you
feel the need to fuck out of the
house, at least go the hell away
from the venue.”
Chicken Soup for the Hooligan’s Soul Official Statement on the Music Camp Incident
Letter from the Editor
Here we go, issue 2. Not
bad. Since the release of the
first issue, we’ve brought a
lot of attention to ourselves,
among not only the punk scene,
but also Korea’s foreigners,
and various connections outside the country.
Our biggest failing with issue 1 was in never completing
the translations. The original
idea was to run it bilingual, but
we couldn’t get help. It’s important to us to reach foreigners who are genuinely interested in our scene, but we also
want the opportunity to let our
Korean readers know what’s on
our minds. This is your country and we don’t want that to
change.
That said, our biggest failing for this issue is how long it
took to make. For the last few
months, this thing has been sitting in my laptop while I waited
for the articles to be translated.
However, the task was much
harder than I expected, and it’s
come down to print in English
only or don’t print at all. A few
translations have been completed and included in this issue.
We took a few complaints
about our first issue, all of
them total nonsense, and all of
them directed at something I
did. The most common one was
that we’re too Skunk-centered.
Not sure if I agree, since we
interviewed the straight-edge
bands Geeks and Champion, as
well as BPJC’s Suck Stuff, and
reviewed an MF Crew show in
Chungju. We gave directions
to Skunk Hell because it’s the
only DIY-owned venue in all
of Korea, and it’s literally the
heart of Korean punk. We intended this publication to bring
new people into the fold, and
it’s easier to direct newcomers to the heart than sending
them right to the fingers and
toes. With that said, I want to
get around to everyone. Writer
Joseph Atskunk took particular interest in BT Records, and
Nevin did a huge thing on Musiro Records.
Let’s see, what else... Oh
yeah, a bunch of you thought
I was sexist because I called
Avril Lavigne “fuckable” and
said I would “donkey-punch”
her. Guess what: she is a whore
for what she’s done to music.
To atone for my error, I sought
out Korean popstar (that’s
right, popstar) Seo Taiji and
offered to give him a rimjob of
attrition. He really liked it.
Which brings us to our next
complaint: crudity. Everything
in this zine is written by real
people, and we haven’t seen
the need to censor ourselves.
Frankly, if you cannot handle
offensive material, you probably shouldn’t be listening
to punk in the first place. I’m
counting on our Korean translators to clean up our language
a bit, and I imagine there’s no
Korean word for “felching.”
Our reason for publishing this
thing is to unravel your cerebral cortex and fill your skull
with barf-soaked words and
ideas. If you haven’t tried it before, I highly recommend it.
Remember that this is a DIY
magazine. If you want to see
more of something, come over
here and do it. Got a complaint?
Shit or get off the pot. This
isn’t some chaebol newspaper
with armed security at the front
door. It’s yours.
Jon Twitch
Jon Twitch
For every time us foreigners have proven ourselves a
liability, there’s another story
about the positive contributions in the scene by foreigners.
The date was Sunday, July
3. The next day would be a
holiday for Americans, so an
extra large number of them
were out that night.
When Yoojung, the door
girl, came back from a bathroom break, she found the door
money missing from its hiding
place in the attendance book.
The alarm was raised, but nobody could find it. We assumed
it was theft.
“I’ve been going to shows
in Korea since Crying Nut and
Yellow Kitchen played street
shows out in the Shinchon area
,” says Paul Mutts, “and I have
never heard of anything stolen at a punk show in Korea.
I’ve had a guitar stolen from
me at a regular rock show at
Jammers but that’s it. This is
a bad fucking first. So we got
a thief stealing from Skunk and
there’s nothing worse.”
When Paul found out about
the stolen money, he immediately went around and asked
for donations. Naturally, he
could only really communicate
with foreigners, and soon donations surpassed the original
amount of money lost.
Yoojung tried to return the
money, but Paul insisted, and
the donations by foreigners
paid for the show that night.
Originally the suspicion
was cast on foreigners, by the
foreigners present at the time.
The discovery of the stolen
money came less than a minute after one drunk foreigner
hastily departed the show, but
he was later found to be innocent.
There is a steady stream
of ever-changing foreigners
coming through Skunk all the
time. Some of them are good
people, and some of them are
major fuckwagons, and the
vast majority we never find out
about.
Rather than turn to paranoia, Skunk Hell responded in
kindness. The Suck Stuff/13
Steps show on August 7 was
billed as free for foreigners in
recognition to the donations.
Jon Twitch
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Continued on page 25
Little Brother
Part 2 in the ongoing story of a runaway American punk in Seoul
Paul Mutts
I was feeling homesick
again. It would come and go
and I became fairly good at
fighting back tears sometimes.
Other times maybe one or two
would slip by my own ego and
find its way across my cheek.
Of course in the rare occasion
someone would notice I would
say it was sweat and change
the subject. Maybe homesick
isn’t what I felt. You see, I
have lived in Korea most of
my life, but I speak very little
Korean. I look Korean though,
so in the United States I get
this feeling of being a sort of
grey swan on alien waters.
Here I was, an American
(by nationality) and a Korean
(by race) living amongst the
Korean punks. I consider myself an extrovert but I rarely
spoke; the little Korean I
knew might be held against
me as evidence of being stupid. Having someone to talk
to was an event I looked forward to. Most of my Englishspeaking friends at the time
were in high school so I had to
wait until the weekend to see
them. I had so many stories
to tell them. Penis/fart jokes
rolled past my lips when I
was not quick enough to catch
them. At least I had people to
talk to, at the price of acting
immature and stupid.
One day outside Hongdae
Park, the homesick feeling
came back again. It spread
though me like a gnawing, unwholesome cold beating back
the warm summer night. With
my parents I had spent all my
time trying to get them to understand me, and out here it
was even worse. But was I
accepted out here as one of
them? Did they view me as a
chimera, with some attributes
wholly recognizable and some
Paul Mutts goes for a stroller ride in front of Skunk.
It’s not easy being a girl
Jiyoung Lee
1. The prospects of not
marrying a good husband
A lot of girls in Korea are
pursuing “professional careers”
these days. Still, the most important success factor for girls
(at least to their parents) is the
husband they marry. Everyone must’ve heard “Shi-Jip” in
some part of their stay in Korea. As a result, even though
most girls are encouraged to
get higher education, they are
pressured to be ladylike, so
that they would be attractive
for men with prominent jobs.
“Ladylike” in Korea usually comes in the form of chic
outfits, long straight black hair,
sophisticated make-up techniques and eloquent manners.
Therefore, it is nearly suicidal
in terms of being a good bridal
candidate if you are a punk girl
in Korea. Whether you are into
ska, old school or new school
punk, girls in the punk scene
tend to dye their hair, wear
unique outfits, and get piercings and tattoos. Most Korean
men are not accustomed to
these styles, and many upperclass men would find punk girls
unfit for marriage.
Not that the girls in the
punk scene really care. Most of
the girls I know couldn’t care
less about getting a good husband. However, most of their
parents are, and many parents
use scare tactics. For example,
“If you don’t take that ring off
your nose, you will not find a
decent husband, and you will
be destined to a life of misery.”
Many girls in the scene have to
endure this talk every day.
2. The prospects of being
labeled as a “slut”
Maybe it is because of the
infamous erotic movie called
“yellow hair.” I don’t know
why, but Koreans tend to revile girls with yellow/pink/red/
etc hair as whores. In addition,
piercing was unknown in Korea
just ten years ago, and tattoos
were reserved for the mistresses of gangsters, so a girl
with the traditional punk outfit
will probably be labeled as a
slut on the streets of Korea.
In addition, it doesn’t help
that some girls in the scene
had slept around with male
punk musicians in the past.
Not that being a slut is a bad
thing. I personally think that
it is just another way of living one’s life. However, in a
country with strong Confucian
values, virginity is still a big
thing. And, people tend to think
that being a slut is somewhat
immoral. Therefore, if a girl is
labeled as a slut in the streets
of Korea, there is a lot of discrimination and harrassment
waiting for her. As a result,
many girls in the scene have
to endure such hardships as
a result of wearing clothes of
different fashion.
3. Curfews
Confucian values are still
embedded in Korea to the ex-
parts that might as well come
from Mars?
It was an after-show party at a restaurant. Everyone
sat around joking and telling
stories. I had my own jokes
and stories I wanted to share
with them. It was too much,
so I left, bought a beer from
the supermart, and went into
an alley. Someone must have
noticed that I was, at the very
least, agitated when I left. I
had not wept since my dog
Joy ran away a few years ago.
I fought it back in that purely
masculine stupidity that a
show of extreme emotion,
save aggressiveness, was a
sign of weakness. I couldn’t
fight it anymore. I cried like
a little girl that skinned her
knee. I drank my beer in a
huge painful gulp; maybe I
wanted to numb myself. It
seemed like all the tears I
had been holding back for
months—if not years—had
rallied for a massive counter-offensive and I was laid
bare with my cover blown. I
hugged my knees and buried
my face in myself. I got the
feeling I was not alone.
I saw Joo-Hyun standing there looking down at me,
though the blur created by my
own tears which played with
light and drew it out into long
web-like strands. I couldn’t
see his face and I don’t think
I wanted to, I didn’t want
him to think any less of me.
I knew that if I saw his face
I would see a mixture of pity
and disgust, mostly the later.
I couldn’t look up at him. He
spoke to me but I did not understand the words. He might
have been saying “Get up you
pussy ass piece of shit,” for all
I knew, but something inside
told me that’s not at all what
he said. I wanted more than
ever to know what someone
was saying to me. I picked
out each sound and tried to
ascibe a meaning to it. Every
word I actually did understand
I strung in my mind like pearls
on a strand, but they did not
make sense or follow one
another in a pattern I could
conprehend. Then one word
stuck out more than anything
else he said. One word in Korean: “동상.” It means “little
brother.” I looked up and saw
not pity, not disgust, but a
smile, the one he always has.
No one had ever or has since
made me feel so much better
by uttering a single word. He
put his arm around me and
talked some more. We were
more than friends, more than
bandmates. We were brothers. We shared what was left
of that beer and went back to
join the others in the restaurant.
I don’t know if he ever
told anyone what happened
or even really remembers if
it did in fact happen at all. It
doesn’t matter. I will carry
that with me for the rest of
my life. They say that family
is forever, but does that family have to only include those
that you share and immediate
and common bloodline with? I
don’t think so and again, it’s
immaterial. I have a brother,
my Hyung-ah.
Even though that took
place several years ago, if I
think about it I can feel my
eyes well up a little but my
face always cracks into a
smile. I think it’s the same
smile some of the more unrepentant adulterous men
get when they think about
their hedonistic extra-marital flings. It’s not supposed to
happen but it did and fuck all
if it wasn’t good. Your brother
is supposed to have the same
mother as you. Not for me
though. I have always found
myself to be the exception
from the rule and this was no
exception.
I also suck at math. Go
figure.
tent that many families still impose curfews on their daughters aged over 18. The families
believe that imposing curfews
will make their daughters safer,
more ladylike, and less inclined
to lose their virginity. This is a
major pain for girls in the punk
scene. Although some of them
have cool parents who let their
daughters have a cultural life,
most girls who live with their
parents have curfews, and this
is a major impediment in enjoying the scene. A lot of girls
have to go home after a show,
missing the afterparty and the
chance to meet new people.
Sometimes girls leave in the
middle of the show. In the end,
some girls rebel, some girls
move out, but it is definitely
one of the hardest things a girl
will face in the scene.
come to the shows do not come
for the music, but for the excitement of the show itself. As
a result, a few male punks think
that the girls are in the scene
because of fashion or for the
boys. Also, there is a tendency
to think that girls aren’t talented or don’t love music as much
as the boys. This may be true
in some cases, but not all. Such
thoughts are really unfair to the
devoted girls.
These are the difficulties
that I could categorize in 30
minutes. I know that the difficulties the girls face are a lot
more complex and need better
explaining. What is important is
that there are girls who choose
to be in the punk scene in a
very conservative country, and
they should be applauded for
just being who they are and not
compromising and becoming
what society asks them to.
I guess things will get better. I mean that is what punk is
all about: rebel against established norms and social injustice to make a better society.
And, that is what (I think) the
few devoted girls in the scene
are doing.
4. Ocassional scorn from
male punks
OK, the punk scene in Korea is dominated by men. There
aren’t many female musicians,
and quite a few of the girls in
the scene were introduced to
punk by their punk boyfriends.
Also, many of the girls who
Riot Cats?
Nevin Domer
There can be no denying that punk scenes tend
to be heavily male dominated—testosterone,
moshpits, and pounding guitars
aside, I want to resist the
temptation to say it’s only
natural. A notion that would
instantly be shot down by
Korea’s newest girl band,
Shorty Cat. Actually they
aren’t breaking any terribly
new ground; anyone familiar with the scene could
quickly list off a whole
string of bands containing
female members. However
these girls are catching
eyes and have been building
up an extremely loyal fan
base. Recently I cornered
the members of Shorty
Cat to ask them how they
formed and what it’s like
to be female in the scene.
Shorty Cat is currently
made up of four females,
all fairly young, but not inexperienced when it comes
to playing punk. Eunjin, the
guitarist, explained to me
that the band rose out of the
ashes of former girl band
Rouge Bonnet. Both Eunjin and drummer Minchae,
who had also been involved
in the band, dissolved it in
order to create something a
little more active, eventually hooking up with friends
Yoojung (vocals) and Nayun
(bass) to solidify the current line-up. Their primary
goal, according to Eunjin, was to create an “active and positive girl band”
while incorporating their
varied tastes. But what
are these “varied tastes?”
When asked about their
influences, most members
decline to mention any
particular bands, preferring
instead to emphasise, like
Minchae, an eclectic range
of influences: “I gather my
influence from everything
that surrounds me and the
feelings and thoughts I
have about those things.”
I was thinking that there
might be more to it than that,
and when pressed most of
the members did mention
some interest in the Riot
Grrl movement. But don’t
worry, fellows, Yoojung
assures us that Shorty Cat
“isn’t one of those bands
hostile to society cursing men unconditionally.”
“It’s not about attacking men,” Eunjin continues.
“However, we don’t want
to be only about music, but
also hope to carry a positive message with our band.
Where there are boundaries set against women, especially in Korea, we want
to push through them and
say hey, women can do this
too!” For Shorty Cat it’s
not so much about rebellion
as it is a natural element
to what they are doing, “if
we are a girl band naturally that includes ideas
from Riot Grrl,” explains
Yoojung, “if we are expressing our own thoughts
and the thoughts of women
then naturally we can be
viewed as Riot Grrl.” Nayun agrees, “Even if we say
we are only punk and not
Riot Grrl, the act of speaking our thoughts candidly
through the music includes
the ideas of Riot Grrl.”
Yet I still wondered how
those very confrontational
ideas translated in Korea.
Eunjin recognizes that
there are very few active
females in the Korean punk
scene, but feels that this
has less to do with girls
being excluded from the
scene and more with the
size of the scene itself. She
also attributes the warm
response to her band as a
sign that the scene is open
to more involvement from
females. “Because females
in the scene are still fairly
rare even when we only
do a little people are very
grateful. Whether females
are starting a new band or
contributing to the scene in
another way, many kids are
very excited and encouraging because we are girls.”
This isn’t, however, always
the kind of attention they
want. “From the position of
a female band we don’t want
the attention simply because we are girls. Instead
we would hope that people
will evaluate our music
and message objectively
and support us out of their
true feelings for the band.”
When I asked if it was
easy for females to participate in the scene, Eunjin
responded that she doesn’t
see any difference between guys and girls. “It’s
just that there aren’t many
active girl bands in the
scene so some people may
feel, almost unconsciously,
that it’s still the territory
of the guys who started
it. There is absolutely no
reason why females can’t
be part of the scene and
Summer show in Hongdae Playground.
the more girls who become active in the scene
the easier it will be for
new girls to get involved!”
So what does the future
have in store for Shorty
Cat? They have burst
brightly onto the stage and
just recently released a
demo album; Eunjin how-
ever, isn’t one to feel complacent. She says the first
recording is still a little too
“unripe.” For the future,
“We would like to perform as much as possible
while gaining more experience and learning to craft
songs closer to the idea
we have for the band.” As
The girls of Shorty Cat.
the band matures it seems
highly likely that they will
become future role models
for other girls looking to
join the scene, but Shorty
Cat isn’t just for girls; Eunjin concludes, “we hope to
share our hope and our joy
not only with other women
but also with all our peers.”
Lychee to Korn—Bring it on
King Ly Chee tour
July 30 and 31
Interview by Jon Twitch
Translation: 99Anger Lee
Editor’s note: Okay, so
this show came and went. We
missed a big deadline, but we
still got this interview out of
it.
An important problem with
Korea’s scene is that we don’t
cooperate with other countries enough. Sure, we all have
friends in Japan, but how much
do any of us know about things
in China, or Malaysia, or Indonesia? This summer we’ll get a
taste of Hong Kong first-hand.
King Ly Chee is ready and
waiting. I conducted an interview with frontman Riz Farooqi
over e-mail.
Q) First, can you tell me
a bit about the Hong Kong
scene? How big is it? How old?
Do punks and hardcore people
cooperate?
A) What’s up Korea! Our
scene is tiny bro, much like
what I assume Korea’s scene
is like. The whole hardcore
scene only started up in 1999
with my band being the first.
There was a punk scene
prior to this but it was basically an expatriate scene and
most of the local kids weren’t
into it—they labeled punk rock
as “foreigner music.”
Punk rock and hardcore
had a huge impact on my heart
and my overall well-being—it
turned me from someone who
didn’t care about shit, to someone who cared so much about
the world.
So I realized that local kids
weren’t getting into it because
everything was in English—the
bands were singing in English,
the zines we had were in English. The English level in Hong
Kong is very low—much like
I presume it is in Korea—and
so I decided that to open this
whole punk/hardcore thing up
to more of the local Hong Kong
kids that things needed to be in
both English and Chinese.
So I started a zine called
“Start From Scratch” which
was a bilingual Cantonese/
English zine that focused on
trying to introduce punk rock/
hardcore to kids in Hong Kong
in a language that would appeal
to them.
King Ly Chee started at the
same time as the first issue of
the zine because I realized that
just having the words wasn’t
enough, kids here needed
something in their face so they
could feel and absorb the energy of hardcore. For us, the
message of hardcore is even
more important than the music.
Without the message, hardcore
is just regular old metal (especially these days—we love
metal; don’t get us wrong!). So
we are passionate about making sure kids understand what
we’re saying in our songs.
The entire first year of the
band we sung only in English. We got an alright fol-
lowing—but once Alex joined
the band and started singing
in Chinese, the reaction from
kids was phenomenal. All of
a sudden all these kids didn’t
need to spend time translating
our lyrics to understand; they
could just hear it on stage and
it blew them all away. The fire
would ignite in their eyes and
the spirit from the lyrics and
the music would just take over
their entire being...it was incredible to watch it all unfold
from the stage.
King Ly Chee is proud of
being from Hong Kong. This
is our home and where we all
come from—I’ve lived here my
entire life from when I was a
month old. We’re into promoting Hong Kong culture to the
world—how can you do that if
you sing in English? Cantonese is what’s spoken here and
Cantonese is what will forever
have the most power in transforming minds in this city.
Q) On your MySpace account you say you guys were
tired of Hong Kong’s music
situation. Why was that? Did
you mean punk or in general?
A) No—we mean music in
general. Hong Kong is such a
tiny city that all types of music cross paths all the time. On
any given show, a band before
us could be a hip-hop act, or
a pop/rock band, and the band
after us could be full-on death
metal, or an acoustic duo.
That’s what’s so special about
our music community here—
kids are into everything. It’s
super healthy. We’re all part of
the independent music scene
which is small and unsupported
by mainstream Hong Kong.
Canto-pop is what rules the
airwaves here and no bands
have ever made it to the mainstream (except for like 5 in the
history of Hong Kong including
Beyond, LMF, etc).
We have been trying to create our own underground community since Day One and have
come a long way in the past six
years. We’re definitely not just
a hardcore scene—punk kids,
metal heads, rock kids, indierock people are all mixed into
this underground community.
It’s fucking rad!
But when we started off the
environment was so different.
Kids back then who were playing in so-called “heavy” bands
didn’t even play original music.
They’d get on stage, hype the
crowd up, and break into some
fucking Limp Bizkit/Kid Rock
cover.
Thank god things have
changed so much. Just these
past two years we’ve seen a
whole new explosion of unbelievably good hardcore and
punk bands. The future looks
so bright for our little city...
A) How is it being a foreigner in a band there? Are
there any problems with that?
Q) Nope...I don’t consider
myself a “foreigner” and people don’t either because I speak
Cantonese. My band members
are all local Chinese kids and
we all communicate with each
other in Cantonese. Even when
we’re on stage, I’m speaking
Cantonese to the audience.
Q) What was the impact on
Hong Kong’s scene of rejoining China?
A) It’s great! Hong Kong
is a Chinese city—it belongs
to China and all local Hong
Kong people are proud of their
heritage and are proud to be
Chinese. Now, if you’re asking
me about the Chinese government—that’s a different story.
Oh look! That’s your next
question!
Q) How do you feel about
the Chinese government, and
does it ever cause you trouble?
A) I think there definitely
has been progress made but
they’re a long way away from
actually understanding what
“human rights” entail. Recently, a Hong Kong reporter
was detained in China for supposedly “spying” on China.
It doesn’t matter that this HK
reporter is known for his patriotic spirit and love for China
and was actually gathering
data for the government—the
Chinese government is just
overly sensitive up there and
lives in constant fear of their
own people uprising.
Yes we’ve had problems
with the Chinese government—
supposedly our band has been
blacklisted by the Ministry of
Culture in China. That’s horrible...and we feel horrible
about it because we’re all so
proud to be a part of China. We
were invited to be part of an
annual music festival in Beijing, but we played a show in
Taiwan that unfortunately was
a bad move by us and since
then we’ve been blacklisted
by the Chinese government.
The Beijing festival organizers
immediately cancelled us from
the festival.
Q) Is there much cooperation with mainland China’s
scene?
A) Yes, there is lots of
cooperation and communication with the scene in China.
It’s mainly punk rock up there
though—but it’s awesome...
punk bands in Beijing are so
fucking good! Bands like Reflector and Recycle are seriously
international-level
bands—they’re so good.
Q) Is there any trouble
selling your releases in your
home country? I know a lot of
Chinese punk bands can’t.
A) Yeah—we haven’t been
able to release anything in China. We’ve been able to smuggle
our stuff into Southern China
and sell it there...but none of
our stuff will be released legally because we have such
strong leanings towards human
rights, personal freedoms, civil
liberties, democracy, etc.
Q) You list lots of influences from Malaysia and Thailand
on your MySpace account. Why
there?
Because we had just finished a Southeast Asian tour
when we set up our MySpace
page and we just wanted to let
people around the world know
that Asian bands are just as
incredible as American bands.
I mean come on, how many
Asian bands’ websites have
you seen where their influences are a huge list of American
bands? There are millions! It
sucks! So we were like, “Fuck
that!” We just got back from
a Southeast Asian tour where
we played with such incredible
Asian hardcore and punk bands
and so we listed them as our
influences. They’re so good
down there! Just the overall
standard of bands down there
blew us all away.
I think, in general, Asian
hardcore/punk kids need to
stand more united in supporting each other. The American
scene is huge—but do they really need even more support
from Asian kids? It’s the Asian
bands around here who need
the extra encouragement from
scenes in neighboring areas;
scenes in Korea, Hong Kong,
etc. who are so small that we
need each other’s help to keep
the fire going in our hearts.
Q) Do foreign bands tour
there much?
A) No, foreign bands don’t
come here...there’s no market
for heavy music in Hong Kong.
So no big sponsors will offer
to pay for bands to come out
here. We’ve had some good
stuff come, like Himsa, 100
Demons, Envy (Japan), Rambo,
and a tiny bunch of others...but
they all came out here on their
own account.
Q) I heard you opened for
Korn. How did you feel about
that?
A) Yeah we opened up for
Korn—we collectively have
always hated this band. The
reason we did this was because
for the longest time Hong Kong
labeled all nu-metal music as
“hardcore.” Since 1999 we
were fighting an uphill battle
with all of HK’s music media,
huge music chain stores, and
radio DJs about getting them
to redefine this garbage music
as “nu-metal” not hardcore.
They have nothing to do with
the hardcore scene, culture
or purpose. Since we’re considered one of the biggest
heavy bands in Hong Kong,
we were invited to open for
Korn. We thought it over for a
good 2 or 3 weeks before we
agreed to do it. Our rationale
was that there was no better
way to show people the difference between hardcore and
nu-metal than actually putting
the two styles together on one
stage so people can hear the
fucking difference loud and
clear.
It was rad dude! There were
over 4000 people there and we
blew Korn right off the stage.
Radio DJs the next day were all
like, “Wow! King Ly Chee was
amazing!” and then went on
to shit on Korn because honestly, they sucked live. The
Korn dudes didn’t even talk to
the audience—just the regular
insincere thank-yous in between the songs. They were
so lame...but we accomplished
what we set out to do. It was
such a great feeling to show up
an American band that we’ve
always said sucked and we’d
do it again to any of the other
shit bands that we’ve never
been fans of. Bring it on Limp
Bizkit!
Q) Do you tour much? Ever
been outside Asia?
A) Yeah we’ve played in
lots of places around Asia...
but we’ve never been outside—can’t wait to get out
there someday. More power
to our brothers in Vassline for
being the first Korean hardcore
band to tour the States! Let the
American scene know what
Asian hardcore is all about!
Q) How was the previous
show in Korea?
A)
Unbelieveable!
We
played six shows in three days
and got to become very close
with our Korean brothers in
Johnny Royal. Their friendship,
camaraderie, and hospitality all
reminded me of what hardcore
is all about. Those dudes have
been ingrained in our hearts
forever.
Seriously, when we were
on the plane, we were all in
tears leaving Korea—that’s
how much of an impact Korea
had on us...we can’t wait to be
back and have been looking
forward to this for years.
Thanks for interviewing
us, Jon—it means a lot to us!
We owe a huge thank-you to
Jin from Vassline for our July
30 show, and Dokyo from 13
Steps for setting up our July
31 show, and I’d like to thank
my Korean brother Kim Hwan
from Johnny Royal for getting
this whole thing started. We
can’t wait to be back! See you
all soon!
지금 현제 한국씬이 가지고
있는 문제중에 하나가 다른나라
의 씬과 많은 교류가 없다는 점
입니다.
일본과의 교류는 좀 이루어지
는 편인데 우리가 과연 일본을 제
외한 나라 중국,말래이시아,인도
네시아 등등…… 의 펑크/하드코
어 씬에 대해서 얼마나 알고 있을
까요?
이번 여름 홍콩의 킹라이치가
홍콩하드코어에 진수를 보여주러
한국에 옵니다.다음은 킹라이치에
프론트맨 Riz Farooqi 와 이메일
인터뷰한 내용입니다.
Q) 처음으로,홍콩하드코어 씬
에 대해서 알고 싶습니다.씬이 시
작한지 얼마나 됫으며 씬이 어떤
지 좀 설명좀 해주시고 펑크 와 하
드코어 키드들이 교류하는지 여부
도 알려주십시요.
A) 안녕하세요 What’s up,
Korea! 먼저 홍콩씬은 한국과 많
이 다를게 없다고 생각합니다.저
희도 이제 시작단계죠. 99년 저희
가 시작하면서 부터 홍콩하드코어
씬은 시작됫습니다.그 전에 움직
임이 있었지만 별로 활동적이지
않았고 사람들도 펑크락을 “다른
나라의음악”이라고 치부하고 별
로 관심을 두지 않았습니다.
펑크 와 하드코어 음악은 음악
을 떠나 제 인생에 커다란 영향을
끼쳤습니다.
한국씬도 예외가 아니라고 생
각하는데 씬이 시작할즘엔 모든
밴드,팬진들은 모두 영어를 사용
했습니다.이 문제가 펑크,하드코
어 키드 들이 씬에 참여하지 않는
하나의 이유라고 생각했습니다.
이런점을 생각했을때 홍콩의 펑
크/하드코어 씬이 커지기 위해서
는 저희의 언어 와 영어를 같이 사
용해야 겠다고 생각했습니다.그래
서 펑크/하드코어 키드 들에게 더
다가가기 위해 캔토니스(중국언어
중에 하나) 와 영어로 팬진 “Start
From Scratch” 를 발행하기 시작
했습니다.
이쯤에 킹라이치도 활동을 시
작했는데 팬진으로는 느낄수 없는
라이브의 에너지를 보여줌으로써
키드들의 씬에 참여도를 높이려는
노력으로 이어졌습니다.저희에게
하드코어 는 음악보단 메세지가
더 중요하다고 생각합니다.메시지
가 없는 하드코어는 그저 옜날 메
탈음악이나 다를게 없다고 생각합
니다.(오해하지 마세요 저희도 메
탈팬입니다.)그래서 저희의 메세
지를 키드들에게 전해주고 이해시
키는것도 정말 중요합니다.저희가
처음 킹라이치를 시작했을땐 가사
들은 모두 영어였지만 Alex 가 밴
드에 들어온 이후에 중국말로 부
르기 시작했습니다.그 이후 반응
은 엄청났습니다.자연스럽게 키드
들은 영어를 중국어로 변역할필요
없이 저희 메세지를 좀 더 이해하
고 음악에 좀 더 빠져들게 되었습
니다.저희는 저희가 태어나고 자
란 홍콩에 대해서 자부심을 갖고
있습니다.저희는 홍콩문화를 세계
에 알릴려고 합니다.그러기 위해
서는 우리의 언어 우리가 사용하
는 언어,우리가 모든걸 표현할수
있는 언어, 캔토니스 로 알려야 되
지 않겠습니까?
Q) 마이스페이스 사이트에서
홍콩뮤직씬에 대해서 “지쳤다” 라
고 얘기한것은 펑크특정적인것을
말한거 였나고 아니면 전체적으로
말한거 였나요?
A) 전체적인 씬을 말한거 였습
니다. 홍콩은 여러가지 음악이 한
데 섞여 생존하는 곳입니다. 당연
히 씬이 좁기 때문에 이런현상이
벌어지는거죠. 하드코어 밴드가
힙합밴드와 공연을 한다거나 펑
크밴드가 데쓰메탈밴드와 공연한
다는게 종종있는일입니다.그게 또
씬에 있어서 장점이라고 할수도
있죠.그러나 이상적으로 씬이 가
야할길을 못가고 있습니다. 인디
씬에서 메인스트림으로 가는길이
너무나 좁은 거죠. 캔토-팝(캔토
니스 팝) 이 모든 미디아를 장악하
고 있으며 락음악을 하고 있는 밴
드가 올라가기 위해선 너무나 높
은 산입니다.저희가 밴드를 처음
시작한 첫날부터 지금 6년째되는
지금까지 저희는 커뮤니티를 만들
려고 노력해왔습니다.단지 하드코
어씬말을 말하는건 아닙니다.펑크
던,메탈이던,락,인디…..모든 사람
들이 함께 참여할수 있는 커뮤니
티를 만드려고 노력해왔습니다.그
러나 생각같지 쉽지 않았던게 “빡
센” 밴드들이 라고 불렸던 밴드들
은 모두 림프비즈킷 이나 키드락
같은 밴드들의 곡들을 커버하기만
했습니다. 그러나 지금 이렇게 바
뀐걸 생각하면 정말 다행이라고
생각합니다.홍콩씬의 미래는 이렇
게 발전할것이며 아주 밝다고 할
수 있습니다.
A) 외국인(프론트맨 Riz) 로써
밴드에 몸담고 있는데 어려운점은
없는지요?
Q) 아니요 사람들도 그리고 저
도 “외국인”이라고 생각하지 않습
니다.그리고 대화하는데 전혀 지
장이 없고 뭐 공연할때도 관중들
에게 캔토니스로 말하는데요 뭘
~~
Q) 이제 홍콩씬이 “중국씬”이
되었는데 어떤 임팩트가 있을까
요?
A) 저희는 홍콩이 중국이 일
부가 되었다는걸 아주 자랑스럽게
생각하고 홍콩은 중국의 한 도시
라고 생각합니다.그러므로 아주,
아주 잘된일입니다. 그러나 중국
정부에 대해서는 물어보신다면.
Q) 본토 중국의 씬과 얼마만큼
교류하고 있나요?
A) 네, 많은 교류가 이루어지
고 있습니다.그리고 베이징 밴드
Reflector 나 Recycle 은 아주 멋
진 밴드라고 생각합니다.
Q) 중국에서 앨범을 발매하는
게 어렵다고 아는데 어떤 트러블
이 있는지요?
A) 네, 그렇습니다. 저희역
시 중국에서 앨범을 릴리즈 못하
고 있습니다.저희의 사상과 메세
지등등이 강하기 때문에 더 어렵
습니다.
Q) 마이스페이스에서 많은 말
레이시아 ,태국 밴드가 영향을 준
밴드로 거론되었는데 이거에 대해
서 설명해주십시요.
A) 마이스페이스를 만들때에
는 저희가 아시아투어를 마치고
난 후였습니다.그래서 많은 사람
들에게 멋진 아시아밴드들 알리고
싶었습니다.미국밴드가 미디아에
많이 노출된 반면에 아시아에 좋
은밴드들은 그렇치 못한게 현실입
니다. 그걸 안타깝게 생각해서 써
포트 하는 차원에서 그렇게 적었
습니다.
Q) 그쪽 씬의 외국밴드 참여도
(투어)는 어떤가요?
A) 안타깝게 홍콩의 씬이 외국
밴드가 올만큼 크지못하다는 겁니
다.큰 스폰서가 있기 전까진 어렵
습니다. 그러나 좋은밴드들 Himsa, 100 Demons, Envy(Japan),
Rambo `같은 멋있는 밴드들이
자기 자비를 들여서 온적이 있습
니다.
Q) Korn 의 공연에 오프닝밴
드로 공연했다고 들었는데 어땠는
지요?
A) 네 , 그렇습니다. 저희가
아주싫어하는 콘의 공연을 오픈
한졌이있습니다.홍콩씬에서는
뉴메탈을 하드코어 라고 부릅니
다.1999년부터 저희는 이 하드
코어 와 뉴메탈 은 다른음악이라
는걸 각인시켜주기위해서 노력해
왔습니다.그리고 저희밴드가 홍
콩씬에서는 아주 큰 헤비뮤직을
하는 밴드로 알려젓습니다.그래
서 하게 되었는데. 2-3주간 생각
한 끝에 결론을 내렸습니다.그리
고 뉴메탈과 하드코어는 틀리다는
걸 많이 사람들한테 보여주고 싶
었습니다.그리고 생각한대로 저희
가 콘을 아주 눌러버렸죠. 4000명
이 모인 공연에서 아주 멋있게 콘
을 눌러버렸습니다.그리고 콘을
라이브를 너무 못하는 밴드입니
다.다음날 디제이들은 킹라이치에
칭찬을 아끼지 않았습니다.우리
가 평소 좋아하지 않는 미국밴드
를 그렇게 눌렀다는데에 너무 기
분이 좋았고 다시 미국밴드가 온
다고 해도 기꺼이 받아드릴생각이
있습니다…다음밴드누구 ? Limp
Bizkit??
Q) 투어를 많이 하는 편이나
요? 아시아 이외에 투어한적은 있
나요?
A) 네네..아시아안에서는 투
어를 많이 했습니다. 그러나 아직
까지 아시아밖을 나가보지 못했네
요.바세린이 미국으로 투어를 가
는 첫한국밴드가 되었는데 아시아
씬에 대해서 많이 알리고 왔으면
좋겠습니다!!
Q) 한국에서의 전공연은 어
땠나요?
A) 너무 좋았습니다.삼일동안
공연을 여섯번했는데 자니로얄하
고 아주 친해졌습니다.그리고 너
무 잘해줘서 아주 저희 기억속에
자리잡고 있습니다.그리고 한국을
떠날때 진짜로 눈물을 흘릴정도로
아쉬웠습니다.그만큼 한국의 기억
이 너무나 좋습니다.빨리 가고싶
어서 미치겠네요.
마지막으로
인터뷰해주신
Jon 그리고 7월30일 공연에 도움
준 바세린의 박진씨 그리고 31일
청주공연에 도움주신 13스텝스
Dokyo13 과 저희 브라더 자니로
얄 김환씨에게 너무나 감사드립니
다.그럼 곧 뵈요~~ 여러분~~
Tapes? What in the fuck?
Musiro Records
Nevin Domer
Dig out that old Walkman if
you can still find it. Maybe it
was traded in for a CD or mp3
player long ago, but can they
really capture the nostalgia
of those old mix tapes? And
these aren’t your ordinary mix
tapes; Musiro Records is a DIY
tape distro offering a sampling
of grind-core from across the
globe. You’re probably thinking; “Does anyone really listen to tapes anymore?” Well I
sat down with Gunhee, owner
for Musiro Records, and asked
him that and other questions
about the Korean and international DIY scenes. Here’s what
he said:
Q. Musiro Records has
been around for over a year.
Tell us a little about how it got
started and what sort of projects you do or hope to do?
A. Since I had long been
around the international tapetrading scene, the initial idea
was just to put out some “personal bootlegs.” I soon decided to get slightly more professional, releasing the Tekken/
Terror Revolucionário split
tape. I also have a small distro.
It hasn’t been updated since
early this year, but hopefully
it will be by the time you read
this interview.
Let me confess I had been
indifferent or even hostile to
the local scene here before
I got down to my so-called
business. This is more common among metalheads, many
of whom complain about the
lack of bands, but few have
the guts to start one of their
own. Anyone who believes in
DIY ethics, be it a crusty, a
sXe’er, a thrasher, or even a
grind freak, should be different, though. The greatest virtue of punk rock is, I dare to
say, democracy, and running
such a small label as mine is
not a big deal really.
Other than that, well, there
isn’t much to talk about regarding the current state of
Musiro Records. Okay, some
of the bands that are expected
to work with me in near future
are Fallen World, Choice Of
My Own, x Secret Seven x, and
Gordon Ivy & The Jaybirds.
Q. Why did you choose to
distro tapes instead of CDs or
CD/Rs?
A. Among the generation of iPod-users, even CDs
might appear out-of-date, and
this is South Korea, one of the
countries with the most gadget freaks ever, so whatever
format I choose it’s not likely
to do me any good or harm in
terms of sales. I’ve got some
nostalgic feeling about cassette tapes as I grew up with
them in my teens. It sucks that
many local and foreign labels
have stopped handling cassette tapes. Vinyl is popular in
Western DIY scenes, but things
are not the same everywhere.
I mean, in certain situations
punks might have less chance
to own turntables while CDs
are still expensive as hell either to press or to buy. Bearing
this in mind, I consider tapes
the most universal form of
promoting underground music.
Most people have a cassette
deck at home or if not you can
buy a decent one for 30 000
won or even less. Many bands
are recording their demos on
CD/Rs, which can be even
cheaper than tapes. It’s when
they or other distributors sell
them for inflated prices that I
get pissed off. Don’t get me
wrong; I’m a big supporter of
the whole “copyleft” idea and
Soulseek rules, if it all remains
non-profit. I still prefer cassette tapes, but then again,
that’s merely a matter of my
fetishism.
Q. You do distro for grind
and thrashcore bands all over
the world, but seem particularly interested in Latin America. Is there any reason you’re
drawn to that area? And what
sort of connections do you
have with the bands?
A. If you ask me what is so
special about the Latin American sounds, sorry—I have no
idea. I do however, hate the
Japano- or U$-centric view of
punk, which is quite prevailing in South Korea if not all
over the world. I can’t stand
the
“wish-Hongdae-wereanother-NYC”-type bullshit.
I’ve always had an exceptional
interest in the underground
music in different parts of the
world, which you might carelessly label “exotic,” but which
I prefer to call “unfairly ignored by Western punks,” blah
blah blah. I know bands from
Iran, Saudi Arabia, Burma or
Myanmar, Nepal, Mongolia,
Romania, Albania, and many
“-stan” republics. A lot of my
latest favorite bands hail from
Mexico, Venezuela, Guatemala, Chile, Peru, and especially
Brazil. I appreciate their ideas,
as well as, and sometimes even
more than their music. When
they sing about massacres,
military regimes, and poverty,
I tend to sympathize with them
more than I do with rich Scandinavian crusties saying the
same things, as these are their
“own”
problems.
Besides,
we South Koreans have gone
through similar madness so
perhaps that counts. The same
goes for other great scenes
that exist in Southeast Asia.
Q: When you talk about
international punk and DIY
scenes how do you see the
place of South Korea within
them?
A: Most kids here know
little or nothing about international scenes other than those
in Japan, America, and Europe,
so when I mention a band
from, let’s say Thailand, they
react like, “Are you kidding
me?” Ironically enough, this
is pretty much the same way
that a lot of the “first-world”
punks view South Korea. One
of the most embarrassing
questions I myself have ever
heard is something to the effect of “Is it still illegal to
listen to rock music in your
country? Aren’t you afraid of
ending up in a jail?” Instead of
aping the Western sounds, we
should care more about truly
international scenes. As for
Korea’s place in these scenes,
I think we are still finding it.
Some countries seem to be
specializing in a style. When
I look at Mayalsia I think of
the vast crust and grind scene
there, and Indonesia of Youth
Crew, Singapore of thrash, and
so forth. The scene in Korea
is still developing and I don’t
think we have anything that
could be considered the “Korean style,” nor do I think we
really need one. The fact is we
just need more bands playing
more diverse styles of punk.
Q. You’ve also have some
releases by Korean bands,
Terror Revolution and Pulgasari. Are you looking to release
more local bands or focus
mainly on distro?
A. Just to correct you it’s
Terror Revolucionário, not
Terror =Revolution and they’re
from Brazil. Sure enough, I’m
always keen as hell to find and
collaborate with more Korean
bands; it’s actually my number
one concern. As mentioned
before, I used to stand quite
apart from the contemporary
local scene for some vague
reason, and still kind of do, albeit not for the same reason.
It’s just that there are not a lot
of people around who share
my fucked-up taste in music.
I have probably seen more
Korean bands live for the last
five months than I have for the
last five years. I already have
it in my mind to work with
some of them on future releases. I wonder, however, if
they would still bother to do
a cassette tape. Pulgasari, on
this score, is one of the main
reasons why Musiro Records
exists, or vice versa.
Q. Some of the bands you
release, including Pulgasari,
are pretty political in their lyrics. Are you politically-minded
as a label, and how does that
affect what bands you handle?
A. As an individual, absolutely; as a label, well...kind
of. Everyone has his or her
own dietary, sexual, and political preferences, which is
nothing to make a fuss about,
but personally I appreciate those who are promoting
the healthy left-wing ideas in
the punk scene or otherwise.
While I cannot speak for others, Pulgasari does have a lot
of lyrics focused on obviously
sociopolitical issues, such as
the neo-McCarthyist stupidity that pollutes this country.
It’s what you might call “more
than music” or in the case of
the particular band “more than
noise.” It more or less affects
the label as well. For example,
there’s no way I will work with
a band that is sexist, male or
female chauvinist, racist, proAmerikkkan,
Islamophobic,
militarist, patriotic, reactionary, or simply moronic. That’s
a matter of conscience, but
then again, I never want to
be a PC fascist or the like. I
mean being socially aware and
active is one thing, and being preachy is another. I often
stop by the Profane Existence
message board merely to see
how those “punk fundamentalists” talk shit about meateaters, nine-to-fivers, voters,
and other innocent people who
aren’t like them. It pretty much
reminds me of the whole hooligan sXe bullshit too. Elitism
in whatever form can suck it.
There are always more and
better ways to convey your
message. In this regard, some
of my favorite bands are Los
Crudos, x Limp Wrist x, Lärm,
Agathocles, Fear Of God, Disrupt, Charles Bronson, Parkinson, and perhaps Dir Yassin,
although each has a different
musical or lyrical concern.
For more information and
sound clips you can either
visit Musiro Records on the
webs at geocities.com/musirorecords or contact Bahk at
[email protected].
The Foundations of Korean Ska
Jon Twitch
When I first discovered
punk, it wasn’t my thing. Then
one day I saw my first ska
show—and everything fit into
place. Ska helped me understand punk. A few years later
I was DJing on the community radio and spinning reggae
songs in the punk nightclub.
Then I left it all behind for
Korea.
Coming here, I practically fell into the punk scene.
I found everything I needed
here—everything except ska.
Around that time, the only ska
band playing was Beach Valley, and they sucked more
than Ashlee Simpson’s vacuum
cleaner. The Skunk compilation I bought didn’t impress
me either, with Brassman and
the most godawful of godawful
bands, Lazybone.
It was all ska-punk, which
I’ve said is neither ska nor punk.
Lacking the soulful groove of
ska and the relevance of punk,
I’ve never been able to enjoy any of it anywhere. Back
in my hometown we called it
frat-ska, because it appeals
to university idiots who think
it’s cool to pretend to be James
Bond and then jump around on
the dancefloor like retards on
the moon. Ska-punk attracted
the people we hated, and none
of the big bands came from the
underground like we did.
I was disappointed that
there was no ska. There’s
nothing wrong with Korea’s
ska-punk bands—except Lazybone, who can choke on
their own testicles—but I can’t
bring myself to like any of
them as much as I love the real
ska sound. I will never respect
their influences.
When Kingston Rudy Ska
came about, I wasn’t optimistic. It even took a couple
shows before I got into them,
partly due to a weak response
from the kids in Skunk.
What I needed was a band
that understood the roots. And
that’s what we got. A band that
harkens back to ska’s roots—
not in Korea, not in fucking
California, all the way back to,
well, Kingston.
This band is for you if you
like the sound of the Skatalites.
In every way possible, they
reproduce the music of the
Skatalites, although sometimes
I wonder how familiar they are
with the other bluebeat musicians. With a setlist filled with
originals and covers, they’re
worth going to see, but only if
you like dancing.
One humourous note to me
is the two Skatalites songs they
cover—”Guns of Navarone,”
which is usually the high point
of their set, and “A Shot in the
Dark.” Neither of which, ironically, are Skatalites originals,
but movie soundtracks, as the
early ska bands loved making
music about their favourite
movies. It kind of reminds me
of all the Korean (and Japanese) bands I’ve heard cover
the Clash classic “I Fought the
Law,” without acknowledging the song belongs to Sonny
Curtis.
The real low point for me
is a reggae song from Bob
Marley, “Three Little Birds.”
I wish they’d dug back a little farther and found some of
the Wailers’ original ska stuff,
rather than relying on the hits,
and one of the weaker ones at
that.
Some songs come and
go as the band goes through
singers. Their original vocalist was from skate-punk band
Half Brothers, an odd pair-up,
but he left for the army. Since
then, they’ve had a parade of
new singers coming through.
At the moment, it seems that
the sax and trombone players
are in charge of vocal duties.
From what I’ve seen, they’re
doing a decent job of it as
well.
I do miss the organ player,
The women of Kingston Rudy Ska.
They sometimes play in Skunk Hell, but they have a regular gig in Bar Nana in Itaewon, if you
can stand going there. They do a set around midnight on the first Saturday of every month, and
you’ll probably see me there mashing up the dancefloor.
who left the band so he could
rejoin Crying Nut when the
members were released from
the army.
Eccentricities aside, this
band will be the foundation of
the Korean ska scene. There’s
a good crowd of ska fans out
there, and most of them are
musicians. Our next step is to
get a band that looks good on
a bill alongside the Kingston
Rudies.
It’s kind of a problem right
now; every ska show has the
same bands, but only one plays
ska. Suck Stuff and Ghetto
Bombs do their best to put
together a ska set, and Number One Korean plays crowdamusing ska punk, and there’s
Dub Spain doing their Sublime
rock thing and somehow passing it off as rocksteady. It’s
not rocksteady; just listen to
the rhythm.
How do we make Korea’s
ska scene grow? Look what’s
out there now, even in Malaysia and Japan. Ignore skapunk. Ignore Sublime—I’m
tired of hearing Sublime cov-
ers. They don’t even play ska
half the time. Even push aside
Bob Marley, if you can get that
through your skull. Don’t let
the big names eclipse you. We
need Korean two-tone, Korean rocksteady, Korean skinhead reggae. By the way, dibs
on that last one.
Kingston Rudy Ska are
a revival band. Isn’t it about
time to make Korean ska come
alive?
I’ve heard that dub was the
soundtrack to punk. Back in
1970s London, there were no
punk records to play, so punk
hangout the Roxy let Rastafarian DJ Don Letts spin his dub
records. Punk came to maturity with that sound. Go back
ten years earlier and meet the
first skinheads, and they all
listened to reggae. Today, the
relationship between punks
and Jamaican music is less
clear, but it’s worth keeping
alive.
Some bands worth looking up:
-Aggrolites (US skinhead
reggae)
-Big Youth (UK punky reggae)
-Bodysnatchers (UK all-girl
two-tone)
-Dr Ring Ding (German skinhead dancehall)
-Gerhana Ska Cinta (Malaysian skinhead rocksteady)
-Hepcat (US roots ska)
-Judge Dread (UK skinhead
reggae)
-Lee Scratch Perry (Jamaica’s
most important producer)
-Mikey Dread (DJ punky reg-
gae)
-Oi! Skall Mates (Japanese
skinhead ska)
-Operators (Canadian punky
reggae)
-Papa San (modern reggae)
-Prince Buster (Jamaican
bluebeat ska)
-Radiation Kings (US thirdwave)
-Scotty (dub reggae)
-Scrapy (German skinhead
ska)
-Ska-D-Lite (Dutch roots ska)
-The Slackers (Brooklyn soul)
Marked in Korea
Deep in the subterranean lair of Sun Tattoos, TK prepares his implements of torture.
Jon Twitch and
Moon So-Yee, a Korean livI ask myself, they are all gangJungy Rotten
ing in London, was shocked to
ster? In Korea, someone has
http://thememagazine.com
observe that “Seven out of ten
tattoo, he must be in criminal
On the wrong side of Ehwa
people wear a tattoo like shirt
because of tattoo.”
Women’s University, you can
or hat. I am totally shocked and
The practice, possibly adfind cheap stores filled with unpackaged junk, old men fighting in front of the convenience
store, and North Americans
picking through the trash. This
is where you find Sun Tattoos,
one of Korea’s underground
tattoo shops. I can’t give you
more specific directions because it might get the owner,
TK, arrested.
Tattoos are a touchy subject here. “They’re an insult
to God!” blusters one editor
to me. More importantly, they
clash with Confucian belief,
which is still strong in Korea.
Most Koreans believe that our
bodies are gifts from ancestors, so it is our duty to preserve our bodies. It’s not surprising then the reactions that
most Koreans have to tattoos.
Expose your tattoos here, and
you may never experience the
infamous Korean hospitality.
In Europe in the past, tattoos
were used to mark all kinds of
criminals, slaves, and undesireables. Korea has not moved
as far beyond such practices.
Consequently, getting a tattoo
in Korea is harder than getting
a nice cold beer in Salt Lake
City.
Born-again atheist Unity gets inked up at Sun Tattoos.
opted from Japanese yakuza,
is a rite of loyalty. Once you’re
marked by a gang tattoo, you
may never fully leave, at least
in theory. I recall a taxi driver
one night who covered his tattoo with an armband. He was
released from his gang after
he had done his time in prison.
I never got to see his tattoo,
other than the odd bits not covered by the armband. Although
the practice is seemingly still
continued, it doesn’t account
for all tattoos.
Binool, a tattooist based in
Hongik University area, claims
that most of his customers are
regular people, mostly in their
20s. “There are many artists
like musicians, dancers, actors, and painters among my
customers,” he says, “but also
university students and office workers and even housewives.”
Not quite the stereotypical set of contemporary undesireables most Koreans would
lead you to believe—the “Japanese, gangsters, and foreigners.” Most of the visible tattoos you’d find in Korea would
be on foreigners. A Korean
would most likely get a tattoo
in an area easily hidden under clothes—the shoulder, the
back, or the thigh.
Speaking of hidden, it takes
hours to find the unmarked entrance to Sun Tattoo. It’s hidden down a narrow basement
stairway in an unmarked alley.
Outside a group of kids are tapping around a soccer ball, unaware of the secret laboratory
underneath their feet. We’re
assured by everyone that we’re
not breaking any laws, but it
somehow feels like we are.
Tattooing is technically le-
gal in Korea, but tattooists are
often arrested, fined, and usually convicted. Binool knows a
tattoo artist currently waiting
trial. He was charged with illegally practicing medicine
without a licence. This practice
became standard practice in
1992, when a judge convicted
one tattooist on this charge,
having nothing else to throw
at him. That case has made it
far easier to convict any other
tattooist in subsequent cases;
even though some judges understand there is nothing wrong
with tattoos, they are afraid to
go against the landmark 1992
verdict.
These verdicts obviously
upset Binool. “It might be a
drastic example, but the law
says it’s even against the law
if you just apply medication on
your son’s knee at home when
he falls.” Although no one has
ever been brought to court for
this, it is illegal to practice any
form of medicine on another
person in Korea.
“I was in prison for ten
days,” says Gun-won, a Korean
tattooist, in an article in local
bilingual zine DDD. “They took
me in, but they couldn’t find
any evidence. They took all my
customers’ phone numbers and
called, but they couldn’t find
anybody to incriminate me. So
they regarded me as an illegal
medical doctor and charged me
with that, because the needle
goes through the skin.” Gunwon is last known to be awaiting trial.
Though tattooing is officially
legal in Korea, everything about
it is illegal, including equipment
and there is no licensing body.
Standards for hygiene are set
by agreement between artists.
“Since there is not any institution giving lessons to become
a tattoo artist in this country,” says Binool, “I travelled
all around the country to meet
as many tattoo artists as possible.” Unfortunately, there is
no guarantee you’re getting a
quality tattoo, unless you know
the artist.
“Don’t get tattooed in Hongdae,” warns Drew, an American
who’s lived in Korea for most
of his life. He confides in me
his most embarrassing tattoo,
which resembles a man yanking
on a bull’s privates. The circle
around the tattoo is uneven. He
got it in the back of a piercing
shop. “I told the artist I had to
catch a train in two hours, which
may have been my mistake.”
Another concern is hygiene.
“The room [for Sun Tattoo]
kinda puts people off,” says
Paul, a half-Korean punk who
plays guitar in a band called
Suck Stuff, “but I don’t see
why, because the room’s not
going into your arm.”
An alternative to a tattoo parlor is one of the many
cosmetic surgery clinics on
nearly every street in Korea.
These places are operated by
certified(<—John:
“certified”
is sadly the correct word for
a doctor’s accreditation in Korea.) doctors. Jay’s barracks
buddy Spanky recently got a
tattoo at one such place. “Look
for a green cross,” he says. “If
it’s a surgical or medical clinic,
go for it. It’s expensive, but it’s
worth it—you won’t get chlamydia or Hepatitis A.”
“Hepatitis B,” corrected
Jay.
“Whatever,”
retorted
Spanky.
It’s rare to find a cosmetic
surgeon who would do a real
tattoo. The doctor Spanky visited was probably used to doing
more standard plastic surgeries.
All kinds of cosmetic surgeries
are popular in Korea, from spot
removal to the famous eye surgery, to “permanent makeup.”
Cosmetic surgeons are accredited to administer tattoos,
although they’re not used to
anything more than eyebrow
tattoos or other natural-looking
makeup tattoos. And they are
not peers of underground tattoo
artists: “It’s literally makeup,
not a tattoo,” sneers Binool.
“No, I would never think of it as
a kind of tattoo.”
Sun Tattoos turns out to be
adequately stocked with hygienic equipment. The owner of
the shop, TK, shows up at 6:00
to let us in. While we thumb
through his library of Japanese
tattoo magazines for Jay’s design, TK sets to sterilising his
equipment. TK has his portfolio
on display over all of Korea’s
punk scene. He’s the official
tattooist of Skunxs.com, the
Korean punk online store.
Tattoos are popular in the
Korean punk scene. As a result,
most of them can’t get decent
jobs, relying on labour work to
pay the bills. When they go to
public saunas, everyone glares
at them. So why do they get
tattoos?
“Because other people did
it,” says one punk.
“I was curious,” says another.
“I just thought it would look
cool,” adds a third.
Pretty disappointing reasons, especially considering
the hardships they face from
having tattoos. So why do they
keep getting inked? The Korean punks say it gives them
a feeling of achievement, and
makes them feel special. Their
number one gripe about getting
tattoos continues to be the pain
itself.
“Rather than a particular
motive,” Binool says, “tattoo
has just been a natural way for
me to live my life, just like going to school, going to the army,
getting married and starting a
family.”
Motivation must be questioned for why Koreans would
get tattoos. Especially considering the employment situation, and the risk of bullying in
the army. In the past, anyone
slightly different would easily be targeted by bullies, and
tattooed soldiers got it worse.
However, stricter rules have
cracked down on bullying.
Every Korean male must
serve two years in the army
before turning 30. Until recently, the Korean army refused to accept recruits who
had tattoos over two-thirds of
their bodies. They can’t flee to
Canada, so Koreans choose to
get stabbed a million times with
a tiny needle.
“There used to be many
people who took adventage of
that law before,” says Binool,
“but nowdays you cannot get
an exemption from the army by
having tattoos anymore.”
According to a 2003 article on CBS News, about 170
men had been arrested over
the years for trying to dodge
the draft by getting tattoos, a
crime punishable with up to
three years’ imprisonment.
The young men were shown in
the national media, disgraced,
handcuffed, heads lowered, and
shirts removed to reveal tattoos of dragons, fish, birds, and
roses.
“When I give people tattoos, it is beyond my care what
they’re gonna do with their tat-
toos,” says Binool. “All I care
is just put all my spirit into the
tattoos and give the best tattoos
as I can.”
One sad story involves a
25-year-old police recruit who
failed his physical examination because of some leg tattoos he’d received ten years
ago. That case got a demand
from the National Human Rights
Commission of Korea to revise
their entrance policies, but tattoos and government jobs do
not mix.
Naturally, removal and cover-ups are a profitable business. Binool admits that many of
his customers want cover-ups,
not tattoos. “They got many
kinds of tattoos just because of
curiosity when they were young
and ruthless,” he says. “That
gives them a lot of handicaps
in their lives: they cannot go to
public saunas, swimming pools,
gyms—they’re even afraid to
socialize.”
Binool tells of one family
man who came in for a coverup tattoo. He had never been
naked in front of his young son
because he was ashamed of an
old tattoo. “He cried for happiness to have gotten a cover-up
tattoo,” recalls Binool. “When I
watch these people going back
home after I give them cover-up
tattoos, when they starting being proud of themselves again, I
feel proud of what I do. I believe
what I do can change their lives.
That’s what they get tattoos for.
It is for a change in life.”
Surprisingly, piercing is
becoming popular in Korea.
Piercing shops are scattered
throughout Seoul, particularly
around Ehwa University, where
you can find groups female students purveying the merchandise. “The biggest difference
is trace. The biggest charm of
a tattoo is that it leaves a trace
and doesn’t get erased, but at
the same time it’s the biggest
weakness. Piercing doesn’t
leave a trace. If you just wanna
look cool in your youth, then
piercing is the best.
“Getting a tattoo is having
a friend to keep until you die.
You shouldn’t without thinking
deep choose your friend who
will live for the rest of your
life on your body and die with
you.”
Jay is not ready to get a
tattoo yet. He has an idea, but
getting it to look right is much
harder. He makes an appointment to come back next week.
“Thanks for coming,” says
TK. “Don’t draw any attention
to this place as you’re leaving.”
“Pablo Picasso, Vincent van
Gogh, they’re all great artists,”
says Binool. “How many canvases did they have to tear and
throw out until they finished
one piece of art? Probably a lot.
Tattoo is art on a human body.
Even if you don’t like what you
have done, can you tear it? Can
you erase it and start all over
again? It requires extremely
high concentration and a professional mind. Tattoo artists
are greater artists than Picasso
or van Gogh, I believe.”
Rocking For Rock Against Communism?
Jon Twitch
It’s hard to talk about skinheads and racism, since there’s
so much bullcrap out there on
the two.
We are the single most universally hated bunch of folks in
the world, and some of us love
it. You think that skinhead up
on the cross wants to be let
down? Hell no.
Part of being a skinhead
is asking for trouble. It gives
freshcuts a bit of glee when
some ponce jumps in their path
and calls them Hitler’s Youth.
Those people are a godsend
when you’re feeling punchy.
And sometimes, if we’re not
tired of playing ambassador, we
do sit those people down and
explain things out. The other
day, I met a nice foreigner outside Skunk. I told him what I
am and pointed out some of the
Korean skins standing around,
and he replied “Well, we have
real skinheads back in South
Africa.”
Don’t blame people like
this; they don’t know better. It
doesn’t help that we encourage these assumptions. Red
or white braces and bootlaces,
Skrewdriver shirts, bands with
‘88’ in the name—if we were
really sensitive to what people
think, we’d stop it all. I had a
friend who wore a Skrewdriver
shirt to a reggae night where I
was DJing, and his friends told
him to change. Perhaps we can
get away with it by pulling out
some sort of race card—”I love
reggae” or “I’m a Korean.” We
all have a copout.
In fact, after reading this
article, you may laugh it off and
say “How can a Korean really
be into this shit?” In a nation
that is not predominantly white,
how can we have white supremacism? To an extent, everyone here has the freedom to
explore racist music because it
won’t result in a swift and immediate bootfucking. We can
enjoy it ironically, and laugh
over the lyrics, and even call
ourselves Nazis when we’re all
good and drunk.
Probably the single thing
that irks me most among the
Korean skinheads is the interest
in RAC, or Rock Against Communism. To me that’s every bit
as much a symbol of white supremacism as a Nazi flag or a
burning cross. There’s a folder
full of RAC on just about every
Korean skinhead’s Soulseek
account. Everyone knows who
Skrewdriver was. Every once
in a while, each of them is contacted by some enraged foreign
SHARP or concerned punk who
threatens them and calls them
Korean skinheads—just what are they rocking against, exactly?
a race traitor. Is it deserved?
Sure, you need to know the
consequences.
Now I’ll make a confession.
I’ve got a horde of RAC music
on my own computer as well.
Why not? It’s fun to listen to.
However, I’m cautious about
sharing it with others, and I
nearly had a heart attack when
a People Haters song came on
while I was cuddling with my
Korean girlfriend. “Gook oi!
We’ll never forget Pearl Harbor!” What a rush that was.
I say that if you’re interested in RAC, you must know
what it is and be smart on the
subject. The music may be
good but the politics are rotten,
and it’s in every Korean’s best
interest never to meet an RAC
skinhead.
Of the racist skinheads I’ve
talked to, most of them really
didn’t have a problem with Koreans liking RAC. As long as
they do it in their own country.
One such Korean, Boram
(bassist of Samchung), bore
witness to
one such band
while visiting Sweden: Pluton
Svea. He reported no problems
among the locals with having
a Korean skinhead present.
It makes me wonder if they
performed the song “Hail the
Swastika,” in which they sing:
We fight for the existence of the
white race every day.
Niggers and Jews, gooks and
communists—you have to pay!
The race war is here; there’s no
turning back; we won’t retreat
Our enemies already starting to
run from our screams
How can a band compromise
these lyrics when they see an
actual “gook” at one of their
shows? I can’t even begin to
imagine; the only theory I have
is that white supremacists are
as lame in Europe as they are in
Canada. Boram’s encounter led
him to believe that there was
something greater than racial
politics at work there.
The top misconception of
RAC revolves around the name.
“Anti-communism? That sounds
perfect for a South Korean skinhead!” One problem: the original Rock Against Communism
organisers had little or nothing
to say about actual Communism. They began organising
RAC shows in response to Rock
Against Racism, which must
have been making their lives
difficult. The name of RAC itself
is oppositional to Rock Against
Racism, not to Karl Marx. To
those far-right and racist participants, they saw Communism
in their nation’s lenient immigration policies and acceptance
of multiculturalism. Try asking
these people what Communism
is. You’ll get things like “Skinheads who mix with other races” and “South Koreans.”
In every article I find about
Rock Against Communism, I
read that the concerts were
dominated by “far-right and
white supremacist bands.” Far
right, huh? So maybe originally
RAC was nothing more than the
“Conservative Punk” movement
of today. Maybe, maybe. I find it
strange that anyone with a farright political stance who isn’t
racist would want to throw their
support under Skrewdriver, a
white power band that did not
hide their belief in racial superiority.
The leader of Rock Against
Communism was Ian Stuart
Donaldson, who is considered
by racists to be the grandfather
of all skinheads. The lead man
of Skrewdriver, who formed in
1977, he wasn’t known for racism in the beginning. In fact, he
roomed with some of the members of Madness before things
went ugly. Most of the stuff you
can find by Skrewdriver online
is from before they broke up in
1979. It wasn’t until 1982 that
Donaldson reformed the band,
with all new members and a
new objective: rallying whites
to action.
It’s important to know who’s
pulling the strings behind all
this. The thing I find despicable
about the original racist skinheads is how they were nothing more than pawns of British
racist group the National Front.
In America, the seminal label
Resistance Records is financed
by the National Alliance, who
promise “a society in which
young men and women gather
to revel with polkas or waltzes,
reels or jigs, or any other White
dances, but never to undulate
or jerk to negroid jazz or rock
rhythms.” The main reason why
I would not trust my back to a
white power skinhead is because one of these two groups
has influenced him, backed him,
funded him, or at least his justified his existence in some way.
Over time, RAC has become a label, then a zine, then a
sound. It moved to America, and
everywhere else where white
boneheads wanted an anthem.
Most of the time it’s used as a
synonym for white supremacist
music, since pretty well all white
power bands were involved in
RAC in some manner.
Many Korean skinheads insist that RAC has shifted its focus. To them, it’s a symbol of
national pride, wherever you’re
from, and racism isn’t the issue.
Operating on this assumption,
it is now possible for Asians to
make RAC bands—bands that
have no official association with
the original people, and almost
certainly have no following with
them. I’m sure it’s the greatest insult to some of them that
Koreans are downloading and
enjoying their music.
So let me ask why Koreans need to copy these cockmarts. All the racist skinheads
I’ve met have been the dumbest
people I’ve known; why would
you want to associate with that?
The Japanese made their Skinhead Samurai Spirit movement,
making all sorts of RAC-influenced bands, but not in the
name of RAC. Although you
can find all sorts of evidence of
Japanese nationalist skinheads,
they’re more the flag-waving
type than the Paki-bashing or
Asian-bashing or gay-bashing
racists we deal with in Western
countries.
Malaysia too has a growing neo-Nazi community, but
these guys seem more like
fucking retards. They want to
show pride in their country so
they wear a symbol of white supremacy. I don’t care who you
are; any non-Aryan who dresses in a Third Reich flag is a race
traitor. Even that inbred Prince
Harry was pissing on his ancestors’ graves by wearing the Nazi
uniform, but I doubt he meant it.
The Malaysian Nazis do mean
it, and one of them told me they
believe that everyone is Aryan
except the Jews. Uh, no.
What we see now is that
RAC has come to represent a
sound or a genre, just like oi or
clockwork punk. Just the same
as we ask for a Kleenex when
we need to blow our noses, or
a Band-Aid to cover our cuts,
or we drink Coke instead of generic cola, or we “Photoshop”
images, the white supremacist
groups have lost control over
their trademark name. And
through this, we’re left with an
interesting exploit.
Korean or English?
Many Korean bands sing in English—we find out why
Paul Mutts
A lot of bands here in Korea
sing in English. For the ignorant assholes like me that don’t
speak Korean past ordering
beer, it’s great to get an idea of
what a song is about. So have
the majority of the Korean
bands been singing in English
so that I can understand them?
For some reason I don’t think
so, but I had to find out.
“I grew up listening to music from America, England,
Canada—and all those countries use English. I fell in love
with that music.” says Sean
from 99Anger. “I would listen
to the American Top 40 every
Saturday and tape it, listen to
it all day long, search for the
musicians and the albums, go
to record stores and buy ‘em,
listen to them, sing along and
play them with my guitar. I had
no idea what they were singing
about (well, mostly about love)
but it touched my heart, made
me cry, made me angry, gave
me inspirations.”
I guess a lot of it has to do
with the American music influence. “Rock and roll is American culture” says Chul-Hwan
from Suck Stuff. “Because of
that, pretty much all the music we listen to is from foreign
bands and we form our own
rock bands to copy (or cover)
them.”
Some of the Korean bands’
songs might have only the chorus in English or they may have
half a verse or a few sentences in English. Some examples
would be Couch’s drunk punk
anthem “Fuck it Shit” and “Pogo
‘Til We Fuckin Die”. Suck Stuff
has their own “Just like a Punk
Rocker” and the skaish tiff “Go
outside,” and the Explode has
its combat-boot-to-the-teeth
streetpunk songs “Social Victim” and “Where is Freedom?”.
Then there’s the bands that
have songs largely composed
in English like the Geeks with
their tempo swinging “Let it
Fade” and Samchung with their
brutal and anything but peaceful
“Rest in Peace”. Roughly half
of Rux’s songs are all in English, like their new song “Knock
You Down” and the anthemic
“Walk Along.” Then there’s the
Spiky Brats with their bouncy
“Together Moshing” and “We
Never Change”.
I wondered if it had anything to do with getting picked
up by a label overseas. English is fast becoming an almost
“standard” language and if you
wanted international attention
singing in English would make
sense. Or would it?
With the help of AltaVista’s
Babel Fish I talked with ChulHwan about it. “Originally rock
music was born in America, so
in my case I think it’s easiest
singing in English.”
When asked if it was a hurdle with the Korean audience,
he said “Some people easy,
some people difficult.” So I
suppose it’s the same with any
situation—but I don’t want to
suppose, I want to know.
“Punk music is a culture
shared by people all over the
world. The reason that Korean
bands use English lyrics is,
first, we personally think that
it’s there (that we are part of
an international scene). Second it’s because we are used to
this style being in English, so
we begin to think that the lyrics have to be in English or else
they sound awkward. Several
people in the scene here feel
that way.”
Sean from 99Anger had
some more answers for me.
“It’s sort of a natural thing.
Bands I look up to were all
American or sang in English.”
I asked if maybe punk
sounded strange in Korean to
him: “No no, not at all. Like
Rux, they sound really good.
And of course, some bands
sound worse singing in English. Well, sometimes in punk
or hardcore music, lyrics are
important so...”
So does the Korean audience have a hard time understanding the lyrics? “Yeah,
definitely. Even my own band’s
members didn’t know what I
was saying. But sometimes,
lyrics are part of music. Voice
is part of music. You know
what I mean? Sometimes, you
don’t need to understand lyrics
to understand music, to enjoy
music, and even to sing along.”
For someone to sing in a
language that’s not your native
tongue... that must be hard. I
have problems with drunken
versions of “La Bamba,” but
then again but I’m a dumbass.
Nonetheless, I don’t know what
it would be like to listen to music predominately in another
language.
I called Jonghee, the owner of Skunk, lead singer of
Rux, and very good friend of
mine. Getting a hold of him is
a feat and a half itself, but he
had some insight and experience to offer. “They (the other
bands) have many influences
from English-speaking bands,
so that’s what they want to
sound like. Because I lived in
the States, sometimes I think in
English, and sometimes English
is easier to express my feelings”
Korean, from what I’m told,
is a language that is heavy in
emotional expression but lacking in logical expression.
“Sometimes that is right.
Sometimes the translation in
Korean just sounds silly. Addicted is weird, it (the word
“addicted”) doesn’t make the
right picture in the mind (in
Korean); it’s too deep. But if
you say addicted (in English),
it’s just that.”
“Korean words don’t sound
as good in songs. If you want to
make lyrics in Korean, it’s too
long. Some songs made in English, you can tell a whole story
in one song, but in Korean you
need like twelve minutes.”
Jonghee has also kept
in mind the English speakers around the world. “Broken
Nose,” I wanted to say that to
all the English speakers. I’m
talking about ‘It doesn’t matter if you’re black or white;’ I’m
talking to those people from all
over the world. English is simpler.”
So do other Koreans have a
hard time with lyrics in English?
“I don’t think so. If they translate it they can get it.”
Seems Jonghee is fielding
questions himself about English
lyrics. “They ask me what such
and such song is about. Lots of
people ask. They want to know
what they’re saying when they
cover the songs.”
Something I always wondered about was Samchung.
They have been around as long
as anyone and have garnered
more scene points than your
momma. I always admired them
as a band, but there were lots
of rumours on the wind about
their various political affiliations. Out of all the bands they
seem to be the most nationalist out there. Despite this,
their latest album, “United We
Stand”—a split with hardcore
heavyweights 13 Steps—is al-
The Feng Shui of Skunk Hell
Should that barrier in Skunk Hell stay or go? Time to do battle!
It’s too high.
it is a good place to
put your beer.
It’s metal and covered in
rust.
It is bad feng shui.
If they took a torch
and removed it we’d
have a block of concrete sticking half a
meter in front of the
stage and that would
be even worse.
It makes crowdsurfing easier.
It’s part of the tradition of the venue.
It separates the band
from the audience.
most completely in English. Do
you lose any Korean national
identity by singing in a language other than Korean? So
about the nationalist attitudes
and everything...let’s kill some
rumours and get the facts.
“What would you say is
Nationalism? We just hate PC
bullshit.” Straight from the
horse’s mouth, so to speak.
“Maybe right wing but I do not
know about Nationalist,” says
Boram, the bassist. “I hate
North Korea and PC stuff. We
sing in English because that is
the sound we always have listened to.”
So would any national identity be lost if you sing in a language other than Korean? “I do
not think so.” Makes sense to
me.
Playing in a vastly western style would be bad enough,
but these boys aren’t about
to give up guitars and drums
for Kayagum(s) and Changgo
drums. That would be pretty
cool though wouldn’t it?
Minju is a punk about my
age, and is actually the first
to show me Skunk when I was
a younger pup. He is now the
bass player for the Explode, an
upstart band of the Chaos Class
record label. Being what I consider a brother I wanted to get
his take on Korean punk bands
using English in songs.
“There are several different reasons; one is that many
punks live in English-speaking
countries. And punk was first
started by bands that spoke
English. Also, there are a lot of
people who speak English and
we want to understand each
others lyrics.”
An interesting tidbit about
the recording of their first release: “We first wrote the lyrics in English and then changed
them all into Korean before recording.” The Explode’s lyrics
are for the most part in Korean, but a few of the choruses
are in English. He said about
singing in Korean: “English
is okay, but…it’s not because
I love Korea, but Korean has
been my native language since
birth and using Korean seems
better.”
So punk in English or Korean, which is your poison? Well,
for me personally, I like a little
of both. Some ideas or expressions in Korean don’t translate
very easily, and some English
words have no real Korean
equivalent. Being bilingual is
a good way to express your
ideas to a wide range of people. Don’t hate a band for saying something that may sound
stupid in English I’m sure you
(and—I know—I) sound stupid making attempts of getting
ideas across in Korean. When
you’re used to hearing a type
of music in a different language, you can’t help but emulate it to some degree. Pansori
would sound awkward at best
in English and sometimes Korean may not be the best language to use in punk or hardcore. But you gotta admit one
thing: it sounds damn good.
It blocks the view of the
band.
It makes the dancefloor too small.
There are more important things to spend
money on.
It keeps people from
tumbling onto the stage.
it gives stage huggers
something to hold onto
What do you think?
Come and tell us!
brokeinkorea.proboards46.com
Zines! Zines! Zines!
One indicator of a healthy scene is its zines.
A scene is made up of more than just musicians.
It’s a space where different people come together bringing their own unique skills and interests:
artist making flyers, graffiti, buttons, or patches,
photographers taking photos or making videos,
kids starting labels, running distros, making DIY
clothing, or putting on shows. A healthy scene is a
community made up of all of these and more—kids
finding a way to participate and express themselves rather than just standing around as passive
consumers. That brings us back to zines: whether
they are personal or political, music or art, they
tell us more about our community than a $20 band
T-shirt. Fortunately Korea isn’t lacking in this
regard, with a few good ones out now and more in
the works. Here is a brief look at what’s on offer.
얼마나 그 펑크씬이 알찬가 하는것은 그 씬에
있는 팬진들을 보면 알수 있다. 씬에는 단지 뮤지
션만 있는게 아니다. 여러 다른 사람들이 그들 자
신만이 가진 독특한 기술과 관심들로, flyer(공연포
스터)를 만들고, 그래프티를 하고, 버튼 핀이나 패
치 등을 만들고, 사진이나 비디오를 찍고, 또 레이블
을 시작하고, 디스트로를 시작하고, DIY로 옷을 만
들고, 공연을 계획한다. 이렇듯 자신들 자신을 표현
하고 씬에 참여할 방법을 나름대로 찾는이들로 구성
된 씬이 정말 알차고 건강한 펑크 씬이라 할 수 있
다. 그냥 앉아서 소비만 하는 것이 아니라 말이다.
다시 팬진 얘기로 돌아가면, 팬진이 내용이 개인적
이든 정치적이든, 음악에 관한 거든, art에 관한 거
든, 그런 것들이 2만원짜리 밴드 티셔츠 한장보다 훨
씬 가치있고 더 많은 것을 우리에게 말해준다고 생
각한다. 다행스럽게도 한국에는 현재 멋진 팬진들
이 많이 있다. 그럼 어떤 팬진들이 있는지 살펴보자.
Reality – Fit For Photocopying
May 2005
http://www.wwoott.wo.to/
[email protected]
Language: Art
I have been looking for art zines
(or literature zines) in Korea, and
I’m sure they’re out there, but I
haven’t had a whole lot of success.
So I guess I wasn’t really surprised
when I did find one and discovered
that it was made by Suckz; if it’s
related to zines he’s got his inkstained fingers on it. Reality is 20
pages of black-and-white photocopied art, which I assume was all
done by Suckz, but I’m not completely sure. It’s made up almost
completely of drawings with a few
picture and collage stuff but nothing too cheesy. The subject matter
ranges from punk-related doodles
to political: anti-sexist, animal liberation, anti-fascist themes. Some
of the pieces I’m still trying to figure out, or maybe I should just enjoy them or maybe that’s the point;
somewhere between sketches and
art school projects this zine is
worth taking the time to look at.
Art zines can get old but it’s always nice to have a couple around.
Maybe other Korean artist will take
Suckz’ queue—walk to the nearest photocopier and DESTROY!
그동안 분명히 있을것이라 생각
하며 art zine(그림등으로 구성된 팬
진)을 한국에서 찾고 있었는데 찾을 수
가 없었다. 이 팬진을 처음 찾았을때
Suckz 가 만들었다는 것에 대해 크게
놀라지 않았다. 그가 만든 것임을 알수
있었다. 20 페이지에 달하는 흑백 복
사 그림들... 아마 모두 Suckz 가 그린
듯 하다. 거의 대부분이 직접 그린 그림
과 몇몇 사진 콜라주였지만 전혀 유치
하지 않다. 펑크와 관련된 그림들에서
부터 성차별의 반대, 동물애호, 반국수
주의 등의 정치적 그림들까지. 몇몇 그
림은 이해할 수 없었지만 심각한 해석
보다는 뭐 그냥 즐기면 될듯하다. 전체
적으로 학교 프로젝트랑 스케치 연습
의 중간 쯤인거 같다. art zine 은 자
칫 지루할 수 도 있지만 이런 zine들
이 몇몇 있다는 건 멋진 일이다. 아
마 다른 한국 아티스트들도 Suckz 가
한것 같은 걸 해내겠지. 가까운 복사
집에 쳐들어가서 한번 져질러 보자!
Star Search Hardcore Fanzine
Spring 2004
Language: Korean
I received a copy of this zine with
my last order from ZipGooSuck. I had
never heard of it before but was put
together by Hwang Kyuseok, owner of
Townhall Records. The format is basic—just columns of text with barely a
picture or comic in sight, which is kind
of strange considering that the opening article is all about comics. That
part was written by Kim Lagyung who,
according to Suckz, is “maybe ‘The
Patience’ singer who is now into Korean comics.” I wonder if this is the kid
behind the Geeks record release show
comic that I saw? That was good stuff.
Anyway, onto the rest of the zine: there
are playlists from some different kids
in the scene along with an Unleashed
Anger interview. The last three pages
are reviews and scene news. Not really a whole lot here but it’s a good
start. He says more in his reviews
than the other Korean zines do and the
scene news is nice if too short. All in
all it’s not a bad read. He ends with a
promise that I want to hold him to: to
make the next edition of Star Search
more attractive than the first. Good
Luck, Kyuseok, we’ll be waiting for it!
최근에 집구석 레코즈에 메일오더를
했을때 이 팬진을 구했다. 전에 한번도 들
은 적이 없었던 팬진인데, 알고보니 타운
홀 레코즈를 운영하는 황규석이 만든 팬
진이었다. 포맷은 사진이나 만화 같은거
없이 글만 들어있는 단순한 형식인데 비
해, 첫 칼럼 내용은 만화에 관한거였다는
게 좀 이상했다. 이 칼럼은 김낙영이 썼
다. 전에 Suckz에게서 ‘The Patience 보
컬이 만화를 좋아한다’고 들었던 적이 있
는데, 이 사람이 전에 The Geeks 앨범 발
매 공연때 만화를 그렸던 사람인가? 그 만
화 아무튼 멋졌는데... Star Search 하드
코어 팬진의 마지막 3장은 리뷰와 씬 뉴스
였다. 아주 많은 리뷰들은 아니지만 좋은
출발이라 생각한다. 다른 한국 팬진에 담
긴 리뷰보다 더 자세한 리뷰를 담고 있고
씬 뉴스도 멋지다. 아무튼 괜찮게 읽었다.
마지막에 규석이 약속과 함께 끝을 맺는
데, 규석이 계속 이 팬진을 만들었으면 한
다. 먼가 첫 이슈보다는 더 멋지게 말이다.
규석! Good Luck! 다음 이슈를 기대한다.
Faithful Youth
Issue 1.5, winter to spring 2005
[email protected]
http://faithfulxyouth.wo.to/
Language: Korean
I picked up Faithful Youth at
a show where the zinester was
handing out copies for free. It’s
a short half-size zine filled with
printed and handwritten text, no
photos and very little artwork. It
has interviews with Hell This Time
and Things We Say, along with
album/zine/show reviews. When I
first finished it I wanted more, but
then I started to like the fact that it
was short and that it was done by
one kid who did everything himself, up to the point of handing out
copies for free. That’s the kind of
DIY passion and commitment that
says, “It doesn’t have to be long,
it doesn’t have to be perfect— I
just have to do it!” Our scene could
always use more people like this!
어느 공연때 Faithful Youth 팬진
저자가 이 팬진을 공짜로 나눠주고 있
었다. Faithful Youth 팬진은 A4사이
즈 반 만한 크기의 팬진으로 직접 손
으로 쓴 텍스트들과 사진은 없이 몇
개의 아트워크로 구성되어 있다. Hell
This Time과 Things We Say 의 인
터뷰가 있으며, 앨범, 팬진, 공연 리뷰
등이 있다. 처음에 이걸 다 읽었을땐
너무 짧아 아쉬움이 있었지만 나중에
는 짧다는 사실이 마음에 들었고, 한
사람이 이걸 다 만들었으며 그가 직
접 공짜로 나눠주고 있었다는 것이 정
말 마음에 들었다. 그게 바로 DIY 정
신 아닌가? “뭐 길어야 할 필요 없잖
아? 완벽할 필요 없잖아? 난 그냥 이
걸 만들고 싶었을 뿐이야!” 우리 씬에
이런 사람들이 더 많이 생겼으면 한다.
구속구석 (GooSok Gooseok)
Issue 9, summer 2004
[email protected]
Language: Korean
As far as I know “GooSok Gooseok” is the oldest and longest-running fanzine in Korea. It’s put
out by Suckz from Kangwon Province. On the pages
you can seehis dedication to international DIY and
grind-core scenes. It must also be the most internationally spread zine in Korea as I keep bumping
into it everywhere I look. On a recent trip to Japan,
I found it prominently displayed in DIY Records
and on offer at Wasabi Distro. It even came up
in a conversation with a kid from Malaysia! The
March 2005 issue is by far the best looking Korean zine I have seen! This issue is rather short,
only 12 pages, but packed full of great drawing
and even a few photos by xZUSTx. The zine itself
is a mix of computer-formatted, cut-n-paste, and
hand-written pages. The fact that it’s black-andwhite photocopied with a staple in the corner and
even the self-effacing disclaimer “clumsy layout
for sure” only proves the point that good layout
and well-done artwork really do make a zine. Of
course the writing helps too; there is an interview
with Victor that discuses his many roles as musician, zinester and button producer, an article on
punk ethics and two more looking at fashion within
the DIY punk scene. The whole thing is rounded out with a page of music/ zine reviews and a
back cover art and lyrics collage inspired by the
band JFA. In my opinion GooSok Gooseok is the
most developed zine in Korea and at issue number
eleven it’s easy to see that Suckz is dedicated to
what he does. If you read Korean, or are even just
trying to learn, this is a zine you should give a try!
내가 알기로 구속구석 팬진은 한국에서 가장 오
래되었고 가장 오랬동안 발간되어온 팬진이다. 강원
도 출신, Suckz가 만드는데, 팬진을 보면 그가 얼마
나 세계 곳곳의 DIY 씬과 그라인드 코어 씬에 헌신
적인지 알수 있다. 또한 구속구석은 국제적으로도 가
장 큰 인지도를 가진 한국 팬진이다. 난 이 팬진을 어
디서든 볼수 있었다. 일본에 갔을때도, 와사비 디스
트로 같은 데서도 팔고 있는 걸 보았고, 한 말레이시
아에서 온 친구가 구속구석 팬진에 대해 묻기도 했
었다. 2005년 3월 이슈는 내가 본 한국 팬진 중에서
최고였다. 12페이지로 짧지만 정말 멋진 그림들과
xZUSTx의 사진들이 있다. 구속구석 팬진은 컴퓨터
편집과 자르고 붙이는 스타일과 핸드 라이팅이 섞여
있으며 가운데 호치캐스가 박혀있는 흑백의 복사 팬
진이다. 게다가 “정말 모양없는 레이아웃”이라고 메
모까지 해놓았다. 그러나 훌륭한 레이아웃과 정말 멋
진 아트워크들이 얼마나 팬진을 멋지게 탄생시키나를
보여준다. 물론 담겨진 글들도 훌륭한 팬진을 만드는
데 도움을 준다. 이 이슈에는 밴드 Things We Say, 빅
터의 인터뷰가 담겨있고, 펑크 강령과 DIY와 펑크 패
션에 관한 2개의 기사가 있다. 또한 앨범, 팬진 리뷰
가 있으며, 뒷면 커버 아트와 밴드 JFA의 영향을 담
은 가사 콜라주가 있다. 내 의견으로는 구속구석 팬
진은 한국에서 가장 발전된 팬진이며, 11번째 이슈를
통해, Suckz가 얼마나 이 일에 헌신적인가를 보여주
고 있다. 만약 한국말을 안다면, 아니 한국말을 모르
면 배워서라도.... 이 팬진은 읽어볼만한 가치가 있다!
붉은깃발 (Red Flag)
Spring 2004
Language: Korean
Red Flag was a zine put out by Skunk Label.
This was the first and only edition that they did.
With a color cover and glossy pages, it’s much
more upscale than most zines, giving it a feel more
like a traditional magazine (as well as a high printing cost). However, some pages were printed at
the wrong resolution and are nearly impossible
to read. The articles focus mostly on Skunk-related items: interviews with Couch, RUX and Spiky
Brats, some Korean punk history and even a bilingual review of a Skunk/ GMC show, written by
Broke editor Jon Twitch. When I got my copy, it
also came with a burned CD containing some Skunk
music videos. I’ve lost that CD somewhere, but I’m
pretty sure they’re the same ones you can download from the Skunk site. Red Flag is pretty typical for a punk zine, but holds a lot of sentimental
value for me because it was this zine that I pored
over with my dictionary while learning Korean.
붉은깃발은 스컹크 레이블이 만들었던 팬진이다.
이 이슈는 처음이자 유일한 이슈이기도 하다. 칼라에
매끈매끈한 종이로 되어있으며, 다른 팬진에 비해 좀
현란한 것이 일반 잡지 같은 인쇄방식이다. 그러나 몇
몇 페이지는 화상도가 잘못된채 인쇄되어 읽을 수 없
을만큼 잘 안보이는 곳도 있다. 내용은 거의 스컹크 레
이블에 관련된 것으로, Couch, RUX, Spiky Brats 등
의 인터뷰가 있으며, 한국 펑크 역사도 있고, Broke 팬
진 에디터 Jon Twitch에 쓰여진 2개 국어의 스컹크,
GMC 공연 리뷰도 있다. 처음 이 팬진을 받았을때 비
디오 씨디가 있었는데, 지금은 잃어버리고 없지만, 아
마 같은 비디오들을 스컹크 레이블 싸이트에서 다운
로드할수 있을 것이다. 붉은깃발 팬진은 그냥 전형적
인 펑크 팬진 중 하나지만, 내가 한국말 공부할때 많
은 도움주어 내가 아끼는 팬진 중 하나이기도 하다.
Break The Shell
http://blog.daum.net/h2k1977
Language: Korean
Break The Shell is a neatly done cut-n-paste
zine with plenty of photos that focuses on the
hardcore scene. It’s put out by Victor Ha, lead
singer for Things We Say. He made and released
issue number one while living in Canada, and the
second issue was done in Korea. In each issue
he interviews two Korean bands and two foreign
bands. There are also a few record reviews, a
comic, and a list of five all-time favorite hardcore albums. That part is particularly neat because he asked other kids in the scene, Kiseok
and Jun from the Geeks, Kyuseok from Townhall
Records and Suckz from Faded Home Records,
to list their favorites. The other part about BTS
that I like is the inclusion of a photo page that
features headshots of hardcore vocalists. Just
I wonder why are they all vocalists? Does Victor have something against guitarists and drummers? Overall BTS is a quality hardcore zine
and a valuable contribution to the Korean scene.
Break The Shell 팬진은 깔끔한 레이아웃에 사진
들이 많이 담긴 cut-n-paste(전통적인 방식의 오려서
붙이기) 팬진이다. 좀더 하드코어 씬에 포커스가 맞춰
져 있으며, Things We Say 보컬, 빅터가 만들고 있다.
첫번째 이슈는 빅터가 캐나다에 있을때 발간되었고, 두
번째 이슈는 한국에서 발간되었다. 각 이슈마다 한국밴
드 2개, 외국 밴드 2개의 인터뷰가 있으며, 앨범 리뷰와
만화도 있다. 특히 첫 이슈에는 좋아하는 하드코어 앨범
코너가 있는데, 씬에서 활발히 활동중인 친구들이 작
성해 주었다. The Geeks의 기석, 준성. 타운홀 레코즈
의 규석, 집구석 레코즈의 Suckz. 내가 좋아하는 다른
부분은 사진 페이지이다. 주로 하드코어 보컬들의 사
진들인데, 왜 보컬들의 사진만 있을까? 빅터는 드러머
나 기타리스트들은 싫어하나? 아무튼 BTS 는 멋진 하
드코어 팬진이며 한국 씬에 있어서 가치있는 팬진이다.
CD Reviews
Shorty Cat
s/t
independent
Jon Twitch
It’s not so often that
a new band picks up so
quickly here. Shorty Cat’s
full of young punk girls
who didn’t want to be defined by their boyfriends.
So they made a band, and
it rules. In a short time,
they’ve become Korea’s
top girl punk band—uncontested, if Nonstop Body
never gets back together.
Recently, Shorty Cat
recorded a mini-CD at a
friend’s home. This CD
shows the ease of making a
real DIY album. Considering
the nonexistent production
costs, it sounds amazing,
far better than some recent, more overproduced,
releases by other punk
bands. I hope more bands
try what these girls did.
My only problem with
the CD is the lack of effort
they put into releasing it. So
often Korean bands use the
“It’s just a demo” excuse.
Demo for what? What’s the
deal with demos? Why not
put a bit more into the liner
notes, get a slightly nicer
CD, and call it a freaking
EP? Give it some lasting
power. I certainly would’ve
paid more than the measly 1000 won I got it for.
밴드가 생기고 곧 바로 인
기를 몰고 오는 밴드는 별로
없다. Shorty Cat 은 어린 여
성 펑크 밴드이며 별로 알려
지고 싶어하지 않는다. 남자
친구들이 모두 밴드를 하는
데, 그래서 밴드를 만들었고,
만들고 나니 정말 멋진 밴드
가 되버렸다. 짧은 시간에 한
국 최고의 여성 펑크 밴드가
되었다. 뭐 Nonstop Body
(몸을말려)라는 또 멋진 여성
펑크 밴드가 있긴 하지만.., 얼
마전, Shorty Cat은 한 친구
의 집에서 미니 씨디를 녹음
하였다. 이 씨디를 통해 DIY
씨디 제작이 그리 어려운것이
아니란걸 보여줬다. 데모 가
격이 무지 싼데, 사운드는 정
말 좋다. 지금까지 제작된 다
른 몇몇 녹음들 보다 났다. 이
런 방식의 녹음이 많이 나왔
으면 좋겠다. 한가지 불만인
것은 아주 괜찮은 앨범임에도
불구하고, “그냥 데모일 뿐이
야”하며 자신들의 가치를 평
가절하하고 있다는 것이다.
그럼 데모는 왜 만드나? 좀
더 노력을 투자해서 좀더 멋
진 EP 씨디로 제작해도 되
지 않나? 난 1000원이 아니
라 더 큰 가격에라도 이 씨디
를 살 생각이 있는데 말이다.
10 Minutes Later
All Your Pain is You
Demo CD
2005
http://www.10minuteslater.
wo.to
Nevin Domer
Hailing from lovely Jeju Island and part of the Ever Rise
Crew, 10 Minutes Later play
powerful melodic hardcore.
This is their first demo—a
three song CDr and it starts off
with a bite. Beware the opening
to the first track—it can blow
out your eardrums if you have
your headphones up too loud!
It’s the shortest and heaviest
track, driving and urgent. For
keeps up the speed but adds
more harmony. It kicks into
a driving breakdown and the
kind of gang vocals that make
you want to grab a beer and a
friend. The song then fades out
with one of those rising outro
solos that leave you feeling semi-euphoric. “All Our
Pain” starts slow and heavy
then the bass doubles it. The
song speeds up, breaks down,
and the bass strolls back in
with a great walking melody.
Sing-a-longs, simple enhancing solos, tight bass and great
vocals all combined through
well formed song structures,
there’s nothing I don’t like
about this. 10 Minutes Later
is a band I’ll be keeping my
eyes on. Looking forward to
more of that island hardcore!
Ten Minutes Later는 제주도
의 Ever Rise Crew 소속이다. 파
워풀한 멜로딕 하드코어를 연주하
며, 이 3곡짜리 CDR 데모가 그들
의 첫 데모이다. 헤드폰으로 볼륨
을 크게해서 듣고있다면 첫 트랙
에 주의하시라! 수록곡 중 가장 헤
비하고 짧은 곡이며 긴박함을 느
끼게 한다. 두번째 곡도 첫번째 곡
처럼 빠르지만 좀 더 멜로딕하다.
이 곡의 브레이크다운 부분과 떼창
부분은 맥주가 생각나게 한다. 그
다음 곡 “All Our Pain”은 천천히
헤비하게 시작한 후, 베이스의 등
장과 함께 곡이 빨라진다. 곡이 빨
라지고, 브레이크 다운, 다시 베이
스가 등장하는 등 멋진 구성과 멜
로디를 가지고 있다. 싱얼롱 부분
과 심플한 솔로, 타이트한 베이스
와 멋진 보컬이 합쳐져 잘만들어
진 곡이 구성된다. 하나도 마음에
안드는 부분이 없다. 앞으로 지켜
볼 밴드이며 더 많은 제주도 출신
하드코어 밴드의 등장을 기대한다.
The Happening
Shit Happens
Self-released
Japan 2002
[email protected]
Nevin Domer
The Happening is a female-fronted band from Japan. And while I don’t usually
like to draw heavy comparisons to famous American
bands I’m going to here. Jawbreaker was one of the first
punk bands that I listened to
and still one of my favorites.
They hold a fond place in my
heart, and the fact that the
Happening has picked up on
that sound made me an instant
fan. A slow indie-inflected
punk sound with a catchy lead
guitar and flat vocal melodies.
Although I should be quick
to add that the Happening is
a talented band in their own
right, if that isn’t enough then
they have memorable and intelligent lyrics on political issues that are pointed without
being heavy handed. The topics range from whale-fishing
to the homogenization (Westernization) of global culture.
“Shit Happens” was self-released and relies on DIY connections for distribution, but
is well worth tracking down.
This CD touched a personal
note inside of me, where it
represents both the dreams
of my past and my hopes for
the future.
The Happening 은 일본 밴
드이며 보컬이 여자다. 뭐 유명
한 미국 밴드랑 비교하자면, Jawbreaker 같다. Jawbreaker 는 내
가 처음 펑크를 듣기 시작하던 시
절에 들었던 밴드인데 아직도 정
말 좋아하는 밴드이다. 그래서 더
욱 The Happening에게 끌렸다.
느린 인디 펑크 사운드에, 귀에 쏙
쏙 들어오는 기타와 큰 멜로디 없
이 진행되는 보컬. The Happening은 재능있는 밴드인 동시에 인
상적이고 현명한 정치적 가사를
쓴다. 가사 내용은 고래사냥에 관
한 것에서 부터 세계 문화의 서구
화에 관한것까지 다양하다. 이 앨
범, “Shit Happens”은 밴드 자체
제작으로 이루어졌고, DIY 방식으
로 배급되었다. 정말 찾아 들을만
한 가치가 있다. 이 씨디는 나에
게 있어서, 나의 과거와 나의 미
래에 대한 희망을 의미한다고 말
하고 싶다.
Worth Noting
Low Blow
Finalround
independent
http://lowblow.wo.to
Jon Twitch
Here’s a band worth noting
from Chungju. It’s worth noting
that they’re part of MF Crew,
but this three-song demo was
released independently. The
contributions by MF Crew are
still worth noting, however.
They have plenty other MFers
worth noting on the backup vo-
cals, including the vocalists of
13 Steps and Nahu. The cover
art is designed by Yeongsoon
from Attacking Forces; it is
worth noting that he recently
started his two-year sentence
in the Korean army. Overall,
this album is worth noting.
Especially after I gave them
a drunken English lesson about
the difference between the
words “noting” and “nothing.”
Glad we got that all sorted out,
then.
Something Fierce
Tiny Ventilation Holes
independent
Jon Twitch
These guys are doing
something different. Maybe
the fact that they released a
nine-song CD and didn’t call
it a demo is proof enough they
know what they’re after.
Originally from Daejeon,
they haven’t been as closely
involved in the Seoul scene,
but they’ve gotten close to the
MF Crew in Chungju. Drew, the
drummer, formerly played in
Nahu.
You could put these guys
in with any of the screamas-loud-as-you can hardcore
bands. They’re not exactly
grindcore, but they’re harder
than Hollow Jan. The vocalist
isn’t afraid to show his talent,
and most of the songs are vocal-driven, with the instruments backing him up.
I can’t understand or find
the lyrics, but with a song
named “Handless Man at the
Claw Machine,” I really must
find out.
Unfortunately, they’ve disbanded now, due to the band
members’ travel habits, but
I predict someday they’ll be
back. In the meantime, expect
the key members to start releasing all sorts of crazy shit
from wherever they end up.
Striking Youth
demo 2005
Omado and Townhall
http://syouth.wo.to
Jon Twitch
I can’t believe I haven’t
seen these guys play yet.
They’ve come to Skunk Hell a
few times, but I keep missing
them.
This is one of those CDs
where you can tell that they
sound great live. If you think
that sounds like a disguised
criticism, you’re partly right.
The songs sound great most
of the time. Most songs have
a great intro, and the instruments sound just right. Even
the backing vocals are mixed
in perfectly—not too obtrusive,
and it sounds like a thousand
angry Koreans shouting along
with the band. At times the vocals sound a little distant, like
Kim Taehun is on a phone. He
doesn’t quite sound like he’s
in the same room as everyone
else. At times the vocals sound
like a steel brush on a chalkboard. But I can tell they’d be
great live.
Surprisingly, Striking Youth
has been around for quite a
while now. In 2000 they released a split album with fellow
Daegu band Boys on the Docks.
It’s low-fi as well, but there is
a lot more for you to check out
if you like these guys.
0Q – Demo Tape
self-released
Japan 2005
Nevin Domer
Drunk off my ass, sitting
outside of a Japanese crust
show, I decided to start a conversation with a group of girls.
It was one of those linguistically challenged “ok, ok, I
don’t know” chats that most of
us know all too well. This one
however ended with a tape being thrust into my hands! The
band’s name, 0Q (zero-Q, made
up of the four girls I had been
talking with). The tape: a nondescript case containing a recording of a practice session. It
wasn’t until I returned to Korea
that I was even able to get a
hold of a tape player to give
this thing a listen, but when I
did… wow!
During the conversation
the drummer kept counting to
five. At the time, I thought it
was some sort of anger management technique until I realized that she was trying to
explain their preference for
non-conventional rhythms. It
starts with pounding drums
and a sassy scream. I have
no idea what she’s saying but
it’s fucking cool! From there it
doesn’t let up and I found myself drawn in. The vocal style
resembles Crass or Naked
Aggression and the instruments Black Flag in their better times. This is experimental
noise with a kick and we are
much closer here to hardcore
than to Sonic Youth. Amidst
the feedback and crazy time
signatures this band remains
tight and their talent shines
through. And that’s even after
the one girl told me she had
only been playing guitar for
three months!
For being only a practice
tape,the sound quality is really
good. I’m looking forward to an
official release. Crass-nspired
noise-core may not be for
everyone,but if this sounds like
your sort of thing then 0Q is a
name you should remember!
일본의 크러스트 쇼 공연장 밖
에서 술을 마시는 동안 4명의 일
본여자애들이랑 이야기를 했다.
대화는 안통했지만 게내들이 테입
을 하나 주었고, 그것이 바로 0Q
였다. 그냥 연습한걸 녹음한 테입
이었다. 한국으로 돌아온 후 들어
보았는데, 와우! 인상적이었다. 그
때 게내들이랑 대화하는 동안 게
내 드러머가 계속 다섯을 셌는데,
난 그게 처음엔 무슨 분노를 억제
하는 치료법 같은 건줄 알았다. 그
런데 알고보니 그게 좀 특이한 리
듬을 설명했던 거였다. 테입은 두
구당하는 드럼에 멋진 스크림으로
시작한다. 보컬이 뭐라고 하는지
알아들을순 없지만 존나 멋지다.
그렇게 시작하여 느려지는 법이
없다. 보컬은 Crass, Naked Aggression 등을 연상케 하며, 악기
연주는 Black Flag의 전성기때 사
운드 같다. 이건 좀 Sonic Youth
보다는 하드코어에 가까운, 피드
백과 미친듯한 박자가 있는 실험
적인 잡음 같다. 연주력이 뛰어나
며 재능이 보인다. 게내중 한명은
자기가 기타를 친지 3개월 밖에 안
됬다고 했다! 그냥 연습한걸 녹음
한 테입이라곤 하지만, 녹음상태
도 뛰어났다. 벌써부터 그들의 공
식 릴리즈가 기대된다. 뭐 다들 좋
아할만한 밴드는 아니지만 관심
이 생긴다면 0Q 라는 이름을 기
억하라!
Tape Review
Belly Button
|||
Underground Government
Records
Japan 2002
undergroundgovernment.com
Nevin Domer
I’ve become extremely impressed by the Japanese label
Underground Government and
their “trash-pop-punk” bands.
Half the appeal of these bands
is their fantastic live shows.
That makes me biased to start
because I can’t listen to this
CD without picturing them in
my head: two girls in ruby red
platform shoes and mini-skirts
flipping their hair while a kid in
a nice dress shirt snaps his fingers to a doo-whop beat.
The vocals just drip with
saccharine and remind you of
all those high school slumber
parties that you never got invited to. The guitars strum out
a bouncy beat that gets your
head bobbing. It’s kinda like if
Valley Girls played punk, yet in
a good way: energetic, sicklysweet and trashy.
This CD only has four
tracks, which is not nearly
enough, but that’s all it takes
to get me smiling. If you’re into
trashy pop-punk this is a CD
worth checking out and if you
ever get the chance to catch
their show it’s a party not to
pass up. Just remember, “push
your Belly Button for another
fun!”
일본 레이블, Underground
Government와 그들의 트래쉬
팝 펑크 밴드들에게서 강한 인상
을 받았다. 이들의 라이브는 정말
최고다. 예내들 씨디를 듣는 동안
그들의 공연을 본걸 회상했다. 루
비같이 빨간 플랫폼 신발을 신고,
미니 스커트를 입은 두 여자애와
멋진 드레스 셔츠를 입은 애. 보
컬은 한번도 가보지 못한 고교시
절 여자애들의 파자마 파티를 연
상케 하며, 기타는 탄력있는 비트
를 연주한다. 에너제틱하고 달콤
하고 트래쉬한 사운드! 수록곡이
4곡 밖에 안되어 아쉽지만, 미소
짓기엔 충분했다. 트래쉬한 팝 펑
크를 좋아한다면 꼭 들어보자. 공
연을 볼 기회가 생긴다면 놓치지
말기를! 기억하자! “또 다른 즐거
움을 위해 Belly Button(배꼽)을
눌러줘!”
various artists
New Kids on the Townhall
Townhall Records
http://townhallrecords.net
Jon Twitch
This CD is the new voice
of Korean hardcore. On this
compilation you’ll find mostly hardcore punk, including
plenty of youth crew, grindcore, and a little bit of premature ejacula-core (one
song by Just One runs for only
nine seconds). And for some
reason Suck Stuff has a song
on this, their now signature
“Why do We have to Respect
Him?” Missing is the toughguy metal/hardcore of GMC,
but this compilation will have
you forget all them.
This CD presents Korea’s
best new bands right now.
From Jejudo we have Ten
Minutes Later, the new project of 99Anger’s drummer.
Striking Youth from Daegu
has a great contribution. Also
worth noting is Lowblow from
Chungju. One Japanese track
by Making Sense made it onto
the album, as well as a song
by New Jersey’s Nothing Left
to Mourn. An interesting addition is a rap song by Jackni
Cholson; they’re as weird as
their name, and it’s good to
hear something completely
different. The connection between punk and hip-hop has
been too long forgotten.
A few of the songs are
mixed kind of oddly, especially on the vocals. I think
it’s the same problem with
the Thirteen Steps album. I’ve
heard the unmixed version of
the Suck Stuff song, and it’s
far better than the one that
ended up on this album. Are
these bands being overproduced? Let the musicians do
their thing.
The best track of the album is “Massacre Without
Weapons” by grindcore band
Shot Between the Eyes, featuring Skele, a very busy man
in the punk scene. He’s also
in Choke Slammer and Captain Bootboys. I look forward
to hearing more from him in
the future.
Thirteen Steps
This is the Reality that We
Confront
Dream On Records
http://13steps.net
Jon Twitch
and Joseph Atskunk
Thirteen Steps are one of
those bands you can’t miss.
This is their second release,
but I haven’t forgotten their
split release with Samchung
the previous year.
The difference between
the two recordings is mostly
in production quality. They
decided to splurge and get a
producer named—I kid you
not—Alan Douches. It seems
like they wasted their money,
though.
The songs are great, but
the mastering sounds like it
was done by the guy at Chuck
E Cheese’s. The new versions
of 13 Steps songs CJHC and
Brotherhood lost something in
this new recording.
If hardcore were charac-
terized by the colour red, an
overproduced album would be
pink. This album is more along
the lines of fuchsia. They did
the same thing with the RUX
CD. The guitars are too fuzzy,
the drums are all silicon-coated, the bass is nothing but a
straight hum, and the cymbals
sound like they are made of tin
foil.
This album was made to
have an impact in America.
It comes with a sticker that
proudly announces “VOICE
OF VIOLENCE FROM THE
FAR EAST. 15 BLOODSHEDDING ANTHEMS FOR MOSHING SOLDIERS. FOR FANS OF
AGNOSTIC FRONT, SICK OF
IT ALL, TERROR.” Thanks for
telling us, genius.
I would’ve been happier if
they’d kept the production incountry, but I suppose this way
more people will see it. I just
hope those people find the earlier split album with Samchung.
Now that’s good listening.
This is for Britney!
Jon Twitch
Earlier this summer, I was
at a Skunk Hell show in Seoul
making fun of some Americans.
Just standard stuff (“Oh, you’re
celebrating some sort of national holiday tomorrow? We
had ours a couple days ago.”)
but it got a little carried away.
My buddy Paul came up to
me and said “This is for Celine Dion” and punched me in
the arm.
Then another guy came
over and said “This is for Avril
Lavigne” and gave me a punch
too.
Then Josh, a big American skinhead, hit me and said
“That’s for Bryan Adams.”
At that point, me in front of
this big group of Americans, I
said, “There’s one other you
forgot about. Please, somebody
punch me for Shania Twain. I
beg you.”
So Josh gave me a gut shot,
and I took it obediently...
Then, I said “This is for
Britney!” and elbowed Josh in
the solar plexus, sending him
right onto his ass and making
his beer spray everywhere.
Anyway, it’s too bad Molson
Canadian was bought out by an
American company, because
I could’ve made some money
selling this tale as a beer commercial.
This is dedicated to the
two Canadians who will fucking
read this.
Your Weekly AA Meeting
with Adam and Aaron
Jon Twitch
Back in my hometown,
two of my close friends host a
weekly punk radio show. It’s on
an underground station, but it’s
popular with the punks. Occasionally they get in trouble for
swearing on air, but nobody
can shut them down.
They both love and support
Korean punk, playing mp3s
from Korean punk bands often.
Adam is a big fan of Rux.
On New Year’s 2005, my
girlfriend and I did a threehour show from 3:00am to
6:00am, and got wasted together on the radio.
The following conversation
took place on April 19, when
they had Wednesday Night
Heroes lead singer Graeme
McKinnon show up.
Graeme: We only stick up for
Edmonton.
Adam: Yep.
Graeme: Go to Hell, Toronto.
Adam: Outsiders.
Graeme: I hate you. That’s
why the next set is like all
Korean bands.
Adam: Yeah.
Aaron: It is.
Adam: It is.
Graeme: Dammit.
Adam: We got the Couch...
Aaron: There’s, uh, probably a
few swears in this one, ‘cause
the Koreans, they’re uh, pottymouths.
Adam: Well and the name of
the song is “Pogo Till We
Fucking Die.”
Graeme: You know why?
It’s because—you know why
though? It’s because I—I found
that like with a lot of like,
like—Japanese or like Korean
kind of streetpunk stuff like
all the drunk bands, all their
lyrics like they only know a
few English words, and it’s
like 1234...fuck...pogo...punk...
proud.
Adam: And cock.
Graeme: And all of those
words will either comprise
names like 123 Cock or Pogo
Fuck.
Adam: Or like even on this
Korean comp, like the band
names, there’s, uh, Cock
Rasher, there’s uh Ma—well
Masturbation’s another one.
Graeme: Oh, masturbation is
fantastic.
Enjoying the night air at 5:00am on January 1 outside CJSR FM88. From
left to right: Aaron (Jebus), Anarchy Adam, and 임정.
Adam: Yep, uh, there is the
Couch with their hit “Fuck it
Shit.” Uh, just lots of that type
of thing.
Graeme: That’s a great name
though, Couch.
Adam: That is, yes,
Graeme: They’re like, ‘we
gotta come up with an English
word because we gotta, you
know, we gotta just come over
to the Americas and we just
gotta kick ass. We are Couch.”
Adam: We are The Couch.
Aaron: I just know someone
out there is writing all this
down and we’re totally gonna
get slapped for this.
Graeme: No they’re not,
they’re gonna be like “Awesome—where the hell can I
buy a Couch record?”
Adam: Yes.
Graeme: And I’ll tell you:
Adam: Korea.
Graeme: Korea.
Aaron: Yeah, so you gotta take
off soon, right?
Graeme: Yeah, I gotta go guys.
Aaron: Oh that’s a shame.
Graeme: Well, you know you
guys gotta keep it clean.
Adam: We do.
Graeme: And uh that’s kinda
what I liked about this show.
Adam: Yeah yeah, it was a
clean night, you know.
Graeme: There wasn’t major
buggery...
Adam: No sexual comments.
Graeme: No one was saying
dick or balls on the air.
Adam: None of that shit.
Graeme: But, uh, you know
shitballs wasn’t mentioned.
Adam: But that’s all gonna go
to Hell now because we’ve got
the Couch.
Graeme: And this is their song
called “43 Football Cocks Being Jerked off onto a Birthday
Cake.”
Adam: Actually it’s called
“Pogo Til We Fucking Die,” off
their albumGraeme: -called “Christmas
Cock.”
Adam: -called “Oi Oi Let’s
Pogo Dancing.”
Graeme: -called “Turkey
Baster Full of Semen Blasted
onto a Cunt Full of Tits and
Balls.”
Adam: Alright.
Graeme: Easy Korean for you.
You can download some of
their shows online at the site
http://retirementcore.com
in
mp3 format, including this one.
Go now!
Go to http://cjsr.com to listen to CJSR online. This radio
show airs weekly from 12:00pm
to 2:00pm every Wednesday
afternoon. Of course, this is after Daylight Savings Time, so
in the summer it’s between 1
and 3. God I fucking hate Daylight Savings Time. Good on
you, Korea, for getting rid of
that shit.
Exposed
고기 빼고
No Meat
Band names in Korean
Nevin Domer
Feeling lost when all the
punks go out for meat and you
have to be content filling your
throat with beer? Korea may
not be the easiest place for
vegetarians, not to mention
vegans, but with a little effort
you can avoid the meat and
keep from starving.
햄 haem ham
fish 생선 saengsŏn
seafood 해물 hae mool
chicken 닭고기 dak gogi
pork 돼지고기 dwaeji gogi
beef 쇠고기 swae gogi
milk 우유 oo yoo
eggs 계란 gyeran
vegetables 야채 ya chae
peanuts 땅콩 dang kong
전 채식에요
jŏn chae shik aeyo
I’m a vegetarian
전 고기를 안 먹어요
jŏn gogi-rŭl an mŏg ŏyo
I don’t eat meat
전 닭고기, 생선, 햄을 안 먹어요
jŏn dak gogi, saengsŏn, haemŭl an mŏg ŏyo
I don’t eat chicken, fish or ham
전 유제품을 안 먹어요
jŏn yoo jae poom-ŭl an mŏg
ŏyo
I can’t eat dairy products
동물성 제로가 들어간 음식은 다
안 먹어요
dong mool sŏng jaero-ga dŭr
ŏgan ŭmshik-ŭn da an mŏg ŏyo
Anything from an animal is
not OK
이 음식에 고기가 들어가요?
Ee ŭmshik-ae gogi-ga dŭr
ŏgayo?
Is there meat in this?
계란이 들어가요?
gyerani dŭr ŏgayo?
Does it contain egg?
전 (땅콩)에 알레르기가 있어요.
jŏn (dang kong)-ae allerji-ga
issŏyo
I’m allergic to (peanuts).
(고기) 빼고 해 주세요.
(gogi) baego hae joosaiyo
Equivalent to “hold the…”
전 고기를 먹으면 죽어요.
jŏn gogi-rŭl mŏg umyŏn juk
ŏyo
If I eat meat, I’ll die.
(It may seem a tad extreme,
but chances are you’ll get your
point across)
A few notes on vowel pronunciation by the editor. There
is no one way to write Korean
in English phonetically.
o as in old or home
ŏ as in long or Jon
ae as in bed or head
ŭ as in surprise or sunk
You really should know
hangul; it’s easy to learn. I’ll
leave it to good ol’ Burke to
convince you.
영어와 제국주의
글쓰는이 - 박현
17새기의 하편쯤부터 2차새
계대전까지 中國, 미얀마, 그리고
마라시아 등 아시아의 땅 대부분
은 英國에게 지배 당했다. 그랬다
가 韓國 南부, 베트남 南부, 필리핀
그리고 日本은 냉전 때문에 미국
영향으로 20새기의 하편에 심하게
변했다. 300여年의 식민지 역사의
결과는 요새 英語 쓰는 나라에서
온 사람은 아시아에 어디든지 자
기 언어를 계속 하면서 쉽게 학원
에서 취업 할 수 있지만 인도나 파
키스탄이나 동남아에서 온 사람들
이 韓國語를 유창하게 해야 韓國
의 공장에서 일한다.
韓國에서 十年동안 계속 살아
온 外國人도 맥주 한잔을 英語로
시킬 것이다. 그게 나쁜 것인가?
이러한 일상생활의 동작 속
에서 식민지와 제국주의의 종적
은 보일 수도 있다. 언어는 힘이라
면 이런 상황에서 힘쎈 사람과 힘
없는 사람은 누군지가 분명한다는
말이다. 객지에서 살더라도 모國
語를 이용하는 사람은 바로 식민
지의 결과를 이용하고 있다는 것
이다. 자기 나라에서 살지만 다른
나라의 언어 하는 사람도 마찬가
지다. 불행히, 이런 상황엔 자기나
라에서 사는 사람은 이 사실을 알
며 모國語를 이용하는 外國人이
자기가 식민지의 흔적을 이용하는
걸 모른 채 한다.
그래서 韓國人들이 英語 안배
우면 되는가?
韓國人들이 英語 잘 한다면
은 아주 좋겠다고 두가지의 이유
로 생각한다. 하나는 英語로 韓人
들이 한반도의 사대주의의 역사를
극복할 수 있다는 이유이고 둘번
째 이유는 ‘우물안에 개구리’ 안되
기 위한 것이다.
東洋 사람끼리 英語가 중립적
인 커뮤니케이션 방법이라면 英語
는 아시아의 비극적인 여사를 극
복하기에 도움이 많이 되겠다고
본다. 언어는 힘이라는 생각하면
이런 중립언어으로써 中韓日 사
람들이 사대주의의 사고방식 없
이 서로 이야기 할 방법이 된다.
따라서 英語는 식민지의 흔적이
라며 식민지를 극복 할 방법도 될
수 있겠다.
게다가 영어는 ‘우물안에 개구
리’ 사고방식을 극복할 아주 좋은
방법 이다. 우리들이 언론과책과
테레비젼방송으로 이 새계에 대해
알게 되니 모든 나라엔 ‘우물안에
개구리’ 있는데 영어 하면은 여러
나라의 언론을 알아볼 수 있어서
자기 나라의 입장만 아는 사람 안
될 것이다. 예를들면 韓國人들이
‘동해’는 英語로 ‘Sea of Japan’이
라면 동해 일대 일본의 것이라고
생각할까 봐 ‘East Sea’ 불러야 된
다고 외치지만 外國人에게는 이 것
은 아주 웃긴 소리다. ‘인도연안’라
는 것도 있니 ‘인도연안’ 일대 인도
의 것이라고 생각하는 사람 한명
도 없어서 이런 상황엔 韓國人들
이 바보 같이 보이기 뿐이다. 하지
만 韓人들이 다른 나라의 언론을
보고 자기 나라가 그렇게 보이는
걸 알고 있었는다면 감정적인 소
리로 더이상 외치지 않고 더 효과
적인 전략을 취했을 것 이다.
‘언어 학대’는?
英語는 경재적인, 사회적인 그
리고 자기개발적으로 혜택이 있으
며 현재의 韓國에서는 英語는 ‘언
어 학대’의 사태에 빠졌다. 英語 발
음을 잘하기 위해 효를 자르는 사
람도 있고 이상의 천재적인 작품
‘날개’를 읽을 수 없으며 英語학원
즉으로 돈 엄청 많이 내는 韓人도
있다. 서울의 작은 펑크락씬에도
英文 잡지가 있다.
이러한 사태 때문에 韓國에 온
사람들은 韓國語를 배울 필요 없
을 줄 안다. 나도 친구 한명은 韓
國에서 一年 되었지만 아직까지
韓國語 실력이 없어서 나에게 소
주를 시켜 다라고 해 아름다운 韓
國語 한마디도 못하는 친구가 韓
國女子랑 결혼할 거래. 이것은 식
민지의 사고방식 아닌가? 결혼 할
때까지 韓國語를 아직 안배웠으면
언제 배우기가 시작 할거야?
韓國에서 사는 外國人은 계속
英語만 할 수 있다는 것은 사실 이
지만 제국주의는 이러한 예상과
문화로 살아나간다. 일상생활에
모든 거래에서 이 外國人은 말할
때마다 자기의 우수상태를 무의식
으로 표시하고 있지만 제국주의의
사고방식은 머리속에 너무 깊히
뿌려 있어서 상대방이 체면 상한
걸 모른 듯한다.
이런 사태에서 어떻게 하면
해?
韓國人들은 韓國에서 外國人
이랑 英語로 대화하면은 안된다는
말인가? 아니다.
차라리 韓國을 방문하는 사람
과 韓國에서 사는 사람을 구별하
여 韓國에서 사는 사람들에게는
언어 표준, 예정 을 높이면 된다고
본다. 그 사람은 계속 英語로 이야
기하는 게 요구하면 일단 거절하
고 英語하는 것과 식민지의 연고
를 설명해주면 되겠다.
이 세상이 공편하게 만들 수
없는데도 外國人근로자의 표준이
外國人강사에게 공편하게 적용 하
면 되는가.
일단 外國人한테는 중요한 메
시지 한자기를 전달해야 한다:
韓國에서 살면 韓國語 배우라.
Jon Twitch
Most bands here have
simple English names, such
as Couch, or Cock Rasher, or
Spiky Brats. A few are less obvious, such as Rux or CST, and
some make very little sense,
like BB Lucky Town or Suck
Stuff. All of these have phonetic Korean versions of their
name for easy pronunciation.
And then there are the ones
with unique Korean names.
The following bands don’t
have much in common, but you
might notice that most skinhead
bands have Korean names.
Likely each of them use Korean
for a different reason.
Also note that I don’t actually speak Korean particularly
well, so it’s a miracle I could
figure these out.
공격대
Attacking Forces
After a particular night
of heavy drinking, I found
scrawled on a piece of paper in
my pocket, “yeong soon, kong
kyuk tae.” After consulting a
Korean friend, we figured I’d
met a girl who went to Konkuk
University. I shook my head
and wondered what my faulty
memory had stolen from me.
Much to my surprise, it was
the lead singer of Attacking
Forces. 공격하다 (kong kyuk
ha da) is the verb “to attack.”
The ever-useful syllable 대
(dae), which we see most often
standing for big (대학교 means
“big school” or university), in
this case stands for “forces.”
몸을말려
Nonstop Body
This one’s so odd I’m just
gonna let the band explain it.
“The name has two meanings. The first meaning is when
the body dries and becomes
thing under the sun. And it is
originally meant for whoever
tries to stop us.
In the end, we wrote the
name in English, and it can be
said that the second reason we
are called ourselves Nonstop
Body in English.
명령27호
Assignment 27
It’s the title of some North
Korean action movie. It had
something to do with the glory
of North Korea, of course. They
used to have the movie poster
up on their website, http://
www.assignment27.wo.to.
배다른 형제
Half Brother
You commonly see the English version of the name, even
on their album cover, simply
because the Korean name is on
the shocking side.
While most of us foreigners are used to unconventional
families and step-siblings, to
suggest in Korean that two
brothers have different mothers implies infidelity.
The verb 배다르다 (bae da
ru da) means “to be born of
a different mother.” See how
many words it takes to explain
that in English.
분노폭발
Unleashed Anger
분노 (boon no) means anger,
fury, rage. 분노의 포도 (boon no
ui podo) is the Korean title for
Grapes of Wrath. When I saw
that, I busted a gut. 분노하다
(boon no ha da) is the verb for
“to be angry.”
불가사리
Pulgasari is a movie produced by Kim Jong-Il of North
Korea. To make it, he kidnapped disgraced director Shin
Sang-ok from South Korea,
brainwashed him for years,
and then offered him a king’s
salary to do a monster movie.
The end product is basically a
Godzilla movie that was made
to show the world the strength
of North Korean cinema. By all
accounts, it sucked worse than
Battlefield Earth.
삼층 (교육대)
Samchung
If you don’t speak any Korean at all, this name hardly
looks more threatening than
Samsung. A quick translation
with no historical background
would get you “Third Floor,”
which is hardly a fitting name
for this band. It refers to a supposed “re-education center”
that was used by the South Korean government in the ‘80s to
imprison the under-educated,
along with the over-educated,
suspected Communists, suspected criminals, and any other
undesireable
citizens
they
could get their hands on. Although it’s not apparent at first,
this is probably the scene’s
most badass name, and if you
brandish it in public you’ll get
some pretty interesting reactions.
지랄탄99
Jiraltan99
For some reason no translations have ever sticked with
this broken-up skinhead band.
지랄 (Jiral) means “mad” or
“insane,” so 지랄탄 translates
to “mad bullet.” It’s a bad direct
translation of the Korean nickname for gas grenades used by
the government on many occasions against protestors.
혈맹
Blood Pledge
This name was a little tough
to translate, and many versions
were used, such as Blood Oath
and Blood Crew, before settling
on Blood Pledge. Another appropriate name would be Blood
Pact.
혈 (hyul) of course means
blood, and 맹 (Maeng) is short
for 맹세하다 (maeng sae ha da),
which means “to swear/ vow/
take an oath.” So basically this
name means a pact signed in
blood.
Stop giving your bands
English names! Do it up in Korean!
Say What!?!
Misheard Lyrics in Korean Punk Songs...Revealed
Nevin Domer
Watching a punk band play, my first instinct is to sing along. Maybe it’s my hardcore training, having mics shoved in my face or all those singalongs, but it’s hard
to restrain myself even if I don’t know the lyrics. This is especially true for those
bands that I’ve see or heard many times, and Rux is most definitely one of them.
Their songs are catchy, memorable, and you will always find a crowd of kids shouting the chorus. Originally I had planned to just translate one of their songs, but I had
so much trouble deciding which one that I finally settled on three. So stop making up
words and check out what they are really saying!
우리는 한마음 (Our Minds are all the Same)
This is probably the most recognizeable songs for foreigners, partly because of
the English chorus. It is also from that chorus that we are quick to form our own ideas
on what the song may be about. The lyrics have always confused me a bit, so I sat
down with Jonghee to ask him about it. “Basically it’s about the punx and the idea of
being a rebel. We are all rebels so we are the same in that regard and we shouldn’t
split up, at least not in Korea. We have seen scenes in other regions breaking apart
over really stupid reasons and I don’t want to see that happen here. We should all
unite together and gather our strength.” A bit of wisdom and a positive message!
처음부터 신념 따윈 나에게는 없었어 정말 아무 생각 없었어
From the beginning I haven’t had any convictions; it’s not really something I’ve
thought about
도대체 어딜 향해 가는 건지 몰랐어 난 그냥 정신 없이 달렸어
I’m just running thoughtlessly, not knowing where the hell I’m going
잘난 척 지잘 났다 떠들어대는 사람들 속에서
In the middle of arrogant and blathering people
나도 정신 없이 춤을 추며 노래했지만
I’ve also sang and danced like crazy
아직 늦지 않았어, 우린 변치 않았어
but it’s still not too late and we still haven’t changed
계속 처음모습 그대로 난 버텨갈 거야
I will continue to persist in the same way I have from the start
Chorus:
We should all unite
Because our minds are all the same
We should all unite
And that’s the way it goes
아무리 생각해도 정말 난 모르겠어 대체 뭐가 잘못된 건지
No matter how much I think, I don’t know what the hell is wrong
도대체 무얼 향한 신념 속에 사는지 이젠 지칠 대로 지쳤어
I don’t know what I live for and I’m tired to death
어차피 남은 인생 2,30년 이리가나 저리가나
Anyhow for the rest of my life, 20 or 30 more years, whatever way I go
지금 저럼 형편 없이 살아가겠지
Nothing can be worse than it is now
하지만 늦지 않았어, 우린 변치 않았어
But it’s not too late and we still haven’t changed
계속 처음모습 그대로 난 버텨갈 거야
I will continue to persist in the same way I have from the start
You never gave me what you said that we deserve
But our minds are proud as our minds our all the same
Yes, I’ll never give up myself
And that’s why we are all the same
As the punx are proud
And that’s all what we are
언제나 이 자리에서 (Standing My Ground)
This song is extremely catchy and always has all the Koreans singing along.
RUX strikes that chord in people, singing lyrics about the scene or heartfelt lines
that all the Korean punks relate to. “Standing My Ground” is no exception: a slightly
melancholy but extremely positive song with the message, “Don’t stop what you are
doing. Don’t stop what you were doing. You had your own passion in the beginning
and that’s what’s really important. Don’t forget that.”
끝없는 길 외로 서서 정처 없던 자신을 돌아보네
I stand on this endless road alone aimlessly looking back
아무리 되돌아 보아도 아무리 후회한다 하여도
No matter how much I look back or how much regret I feel
다시 돌아갈 순 없다는 걸 나 잘 알기에 오늘도 또 다시 일어선다
I know I can never go back so today I’ll rise to my feet again
쉴세 없이 지나간 시간 속에 놓쳐버린 자신을 돌아보네
As time ceaselessly passes by I turn and watch the old me slip away
아무리 되돌아 보아도 아무리 후회한다 하여도
no matter how much I look back or how much regret I feel
다시 돌아갈 순 없다는 걸 나 잘 알기에 오늘도 또 다시 일어선다
I know I can never go back so today I’ll rise to my feet again
세월이 지나도 언제나 그대로 내 자리여기서 이대로
Even as the years pass by I will always stay the same as I am now
시간이 지나도 언제나 이대로 내 모습여기서 이대로
Even as time passes by I will always do as I do now
덤벼라 (Dare Me)
This is one of my personal favorites. Written by Rux’s old bassist Lee Joohyun. I
can’t explain how excited this song makes me! Once again Jonghee’s words make the
perfect introduction, “This was written when RUX was very young and had a lot of
anger towards society. We didn’t do anything wrong but were made to pay for certain
things and for just being the way we were. We admit that this is the way we have to
live but sometimes you just need to spit it out: FUCK YOU ALL!”
이제껏 난 아무 잘못 안 했는데 정말 난 아무 잘못 안 했는데
I didn’t do anything wrong this time, I really didn’t do anything!
어떻게 된 놈의 세상이 다 이 모양인지 내 머리로는 이해할 수 없네
I can’t understand this fucking world
언젠간 좀 달라지길 바랬는데 좀 달라지길 바랬는데
Once I wished that things would change but
변치 않는 이세상은 나를 비웃고 잠시도 나를 그냥 내버려두질 않네
Nothing changed and this world just laughs and pesters me
Chorus:
덤벼라 덤벼라 미친개씨발놈들아 너의 그 잘난 대가리는 아무 소용없다
Dare me, dare me you stupid motherfuckers, I have no use for you shitheads
덤벼라 덤벼라 미친개씨발놈들아 개 같은 이세상에 미련 따윈 없다
Dare me, dare me you stupid motherfuckers, I’ve no attachment to this shitty world
나 멋대로 세상 살아왔지 날 반겨 주지 않는 세상에서 살기 위해
I’ve lived by my own rules in a world that gave me no pleasure
정신 없이 달려야만 했네 그 누가 뭐라 해도 그 누가 비웃어도
I had to run in alienation, but no matter what anyone says or when they laugh
내겐 아무 감각조차 없네 마음껏 비웃어라 개미친 씨발놈들아 더 이상 바라는 건 없다
I don’t feel anything and I no longer pay any might to the stupid assholes
언젠간 좀 달라지길 바랬는데 제발 좀 달라지길 바랬는데 어떻게든 이 지겨운 세상에서 벗
어나길 바랬는데
Once I wished that things would change I really wished they’d change I wished I
could find someway to shake off this loathsome world
멍청하게 화만 내며 살기에는 이세상이 짧다지만 하루하루를 이렇게 살다가는 아무것도
할 수 없네
Living in blind anger this life is short but if I live like this everyday I will never be
able to do anything
The Bimonthly Bootfuck
Jon Twitch
Stop asking me where I’m
from. Don’t get me wrong—I’m
proud of my hometown and my
country, but I’m tired of people
walking up to me and blurting
out the same question, even
before they get my name.
Does it really matter? Do
you think your city is better
than mine? If you don’t like my
city, are you going to stop talking to me? It doesn’t matter to
me where you’re from, and it
probably isn’t close to where I
live. Those matters are worth
discussing only after a little bit
of beer and we establish some
common ground.
Once while standing with
a group of foreigners in Hongdae Playground, a guy came
over and said “Hey, is anyone
here American?” I pushed Paul
in his direction and said “He
is. Talk with him.” Maybe he
doesn’t mind Australians and
Canadians, but the way he introduced himself was by finding
out who’s from the same country as him.
And then there was that
friendly dude at sunrise after a
Club Day who wanted to know
where we were from.
“Uranus,” I replied.
But he really, really needed to know. “Where are you
from?”
Dude, it’s not going to save
your life, unless I’m from Remembertoweararubbertown in
Shaveyourbackoslovakia.
Is this starting to get incoherent? Why don’t you ask
me where I’m from to break
the ice? I’m from a place I’m
proud of, but I don’t expect you
to understand how I feel about
it. How about we just admit
it’s small talk and stick to the
usual formalities, like “How
are you?” Or you could kill me
now, if you promise to make it
a murder-suicide.
So quit asking me where
I’m from. What’s important is
where we are now, and where
we’re going. How about figuring that out first?
Do you like cats? This here kitten is named Seungpa. If you
know the former singer if Jiraltan99, you probably have some
questions.
A little over a year ago, the human Seungpa began teasing me
and pretending I was a dog. He told me that Jon is a common name
for Korean pets, along with Mary for female pets. Anyway, it hurt
my feelings, so I named a whole freaking cat after him.